Harmonic and melodic octave templates. 1990

L Demany, and C Semal
Laboratoire de Psychoacoustique, Université de Bordeaux II, France.

For normal-hearing adult listeners, two simultaneous pure tones with a frequency ratio close to 2/1 may perceptually fuse into a single sound, which shows that such listeners are sensitive to "octave harmony." Many adult listeners are also able to consistently adjust two successive pure tones "one octave apart," which shows that they possess melodic octave templates. According to Terhardt [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 55, 1061-1069 (1974)], melodic octave templates and the perception of octave harmony originate from a common learning process taking place in early life. In the two experiments reported here, subjects performed repeated octave adjustments for pairs of simultaneous and successive tone bursts. Both tones were presented monaurally, at 45 or 65 dB SPL. The frequency of the lower tone (fref) was an independent variable, while the frequency of the higher tone was adjustable within a 500-cent range. In some conditions, when the two tones were presented simultaneously, they were sinusoidally frequency modulated in a coherent manner, at a rate of 2 or 4 Hz; the aim of this frequency modulation was to force the subjects to adopt a synthetic listening strategy, i.e., to base their adjustments on perceived harmony. For fref values ranging from 270-2000 Hz, subjects performed consistent adjustments when the tones were presented successively: fref had little effect on the adjustments' variability. However, in the same frequency range, the variability of the harmonic adjustments markedly increased with fref; for the highest fref values, it was much greater than the variability of the melodic adjustments. The results suggest that, in adult listeners, the perception of octave harmony disappears at frequencies for which melodic octaves are still accurately perceived.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008144 Loudness Perception The perceived attribute of a sound which corresponds to the physical attribute of intensity. Loudness Perceptions,Perception, Loudness,Perceptions, Loudness
D009146 Music Sound that expresses emotion through rhythm, melody, and harmony. Classical Music,Hip Hop Music,Jazz Music,Rap Music,Rock and Roll Music,Songs,Vocal Melody,Hop Music, Hip,Melodies, Vocal,Melody, Vocal,Music, Classical,Music, Hip Hop,Music, Jazz,Music, Rap,Song,Vocal Melodies
D010897 Pitch Discrimination The ability to differentiate sound frequency or pitch. Discrimination, Pitch,Pitch Discriminations
D011571 Psychoacoustics The science pertaining to the interrelationship of psychologic phenomena and the individual's response to the physical properties of sound. Psychoacoustic
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000328 Adult A person having attained full growth or maturity. Adults are of 19 through 44 years of age. For a person between 19 and 24 years of age, YOUNG ADULT is available. Adults
D001288 Attention Focusing on certain aspects of current experience to the exclusion of others. It is the act of heeding or taking notice or concentrating. Focus of Attention,Selective Attention,Social Attention,Attention Focus,Attention, Selective,Attention, Social,Selective Attentions
D001309 Auditory Threshold The audibility limit of discriminating sound intensity and pitch. Auditory Thresholds,Threshold, Auditory,Thresholds, Auditory

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