In human memory, the ability to recognize a previously encountered stimulus often undergoes cumulative interference when the number of intervening items between its first and second presentation increases. Although this is a common effect in many domains, melodies composed in tuning systems familiar to participants (e.g., Western tonal music) do not seem to suffer such cumulative decrements in recognition performance. Interestingly, melodies in unfamiliar tuning systems do show cumulative decrements. This finding has been predicted by a novel Regenerative Multiple Representations (RMR) conjecture. The present study further explores this phenomenon and the conjecture by investigating pitch-only (isochronous rhythm) and rhythm-only (monotone ...
Abstract Two experiments explored the relation between melodic expectancy and melodic memory. In Exp...
The aim of the presented study was to find structural descriptions of melodies that influence recog...
Existing research gives an inconsistent picture of the nature of the cognitive processes underlying ...
In human memory, the ability to recognize a previously encountered stimulus often undergoes cumulati...
In a continuous recognition paradigm, most stimuli elicit superior recognition performance when the ...
In many memory domains, a decrease in recognition performance between the first and second presentat...
The aim of this study was to assess the influence of melodic and rhythmic redundancies, and their in...
A series of experiments investigate the roles of relational coding and expectancy in memory for melo...
The aim of this study was to assess the influence of melodic and rhythmic redundancies, and their in...
Memories of most stimuli in the auditory and other domains are prone to the disruptive interference ...
Existing research gives an inconsistent picture of the nature of the cognitive processes underlying ...
Memories of most stimuli in the auditory and other domains are prone to the disruptive interference ...
Memories of most stimuli in the auditory and other domains are prone to the disruptive interference ...
& In music, multiple musical objects often overlap in time. Western polyphonic music contains mu...
We address the problem of musical variation (identification of different musical sequences as variat...
Abstract Two experiments explored the relation between melodic expectancy and melodic memory. In Exp...
The aim of the presented study was to find structural descriptions of melodies that influence recog...
Existing research gives an inconsistent picture of the nature of the cognitive processes underlying ...
In human memory, the ability to recognize a previously encountered stimulus often undergoes cumulati...
In a continuous recognition paradigm, most stimuli elicit superior recognition performance when the ...
In many memory domains, a decrease in recognition performance between the first and second presentat...
The aim of this study was to assess the influence of melodic and rhythmic redundancies, and their in...
A series of experiments investigate the roles of relational coding and expectancy in memory for melo...
The aim of this study was to assess the influence of melodic and rhythmic redundancies, and their in...
Memories of most stimuli in the auditory and other domains are prone to the disruptive interference ...
Existing research gives an inconsistent picture of the nature of the cognitive processes underlying ...
Memories of most stimuli in the auditory and other domains are prone to the disruptive interference ...
Memories of most stimuli in the auditory and other domains are prone to the disruptive interference ...
& In music, multiple musical objects often overlap in time. Western polyphonic music contains mu...
We address the problem of musical variation (identification of different musical sequences as variat...
Abstract Two experiments explored the relation between melodic expectancy and melodic memory. In Exp...
The aim of the presented study was to find structural descriptions of melodies that influence recog...
Existing research gives an inconsistent picture of the nature of the cognitive processes underlying ...