ABSTRACT: In line with musical “common sense ” (but contrary to the century-old tradition of musical psychophysics), we show that harmony is an inherently three-tone phenomenon. Previous attempts at explaining the affective response to major/minor chords and resolved/unresolved chords on the basis of the summation of interval dissonance have been notably unsuccessful, but consideration of the relative size of the intervals contained in triads leads directly to solutions to these historical problems. At the heart of our model is Leonard Meyer’s idea from 1956 concerning “intervallic equidistance ” – i.e., the perception of “tension ” inherent to any three-tone combination that has two intervals of equivalent size (e.g., the augmented chord)...
Previous research on harmony perception has mainly been concerned with horizontal aspects of harmon...
The nature of the representation that listeners form of the underlying harmony of a tone sequence wa...
Previous empirical studies have suggested that the perceived consonance/dissonance (C/D) of a musica...
In line with musical “common sense” (but contrary to the century-old tradition of musical psychophys...
The relative consonance/dissonance of 2-tone intervals is well understood both experimentally and t...
Cook & Fujisawa (2006) point out that, contrary to the predictions of psychoacoustic models, the di...
We describe a psychophysical model of 3-tone combina-tions that explains the relative sonority of th...
This paper attempts to establish a psychophysical basis for both stationary (tension in chord sonori...
From the seventeenth century to the present day, tonal harmonic music has had a number of invariant ...
The focus of this dissertation is to investigate the perception of single chords, both in terms of...
This PhD study investigates how our perception of musical chords, both in isolation and in musical c...
Throughout the centuries, music theorists have consistently designated the augmented triad as disso...
Dissonance curves are the starting point for an investigation into a psychoacoustically informed ha...
From the seventeenth century to the present day, tonal harmonic music has had a number of invariant ...
Music is capable of eliciting a wide variety of sensations and emotions. Current models of tonality ...
Previous research on harmony perception has mainly been concerned with horizontal aspects of harmon...
The nature of the representation that listeners form of the underlying harmony of a tone sequence wa...
Previous empirical studies have suggested that the perceived consonance/dissonance (C/D) of a musica...
In line with musical “common sense” (but contrary to the century-old tradition of musical psychophys...
The relative consonance/dissonance of 2-tone intervals is well understood both experimentally and t...
Cook & Fujisawa (2006) point out that, contrary to the predictions of psychoacoustic models, the di...
We describe a psychophysical model of 3-tone combina-tions that explains the relative sonority of th...
This paper attempts to establish a psychophysical basis for both stationary (tension in chord sonori...
From the seventeenth century to the present day, tonal harmonic music has had a number of invariant ...
The focus of this dissertation is to investigate the perception of single chords, both in terms of...
This PhD study investigates how our perception of musical chords, both in isolation and in musical c...
Throughout the centuries, music theorists have consistently designated the augmented triad as disso...
Dissonance curves are the starting point for an investigation into a psychoacoustically informed ha...
From the seventeenth century to the present day, tonal harmonic music has had a number of invariant ...
Music is capable of eliciting a wide variety of sensations and emotions. Current models of tonality ...
Previous research on harmony perception has mainly been concerned with horizontal aspects of harmon...
The nature of the representation that listeners form of the underlying harmony of a tone sequence wa...
Previous empirical studies have suggested that the perceived consonance/dissonance (C/D) of a musica...