This study explores the rules regulating the formation of temporal expectancies when we listen to a rhythmic sequence and extract regularities (or invariant temporal information) projecting them in the near future. Our ability to generate these expectancies is widely dependant on the metric structure suggested by the patterns we entrain to. In Experiment 1, we mapped temporal expectancies evoked by three different repeating patterns in which the phenomenal accents strength was manipulated keeping the metric structure constant in all three patterns. Results of the test tone timing evaluation reveal that expectancy waves are quite short (after the stimulus stops) and very dependent on phenomenal accent strength. In Experiment 2, we used four...
Temporal regularities in speech, such as interdependencies in the timing of speech events, are thoug...
Contains fulltext : 74721.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)A definition is ...
Research into linguistic rhythm has been dominated by the idea that languages can be classified acco...
The processing of rhythmic events in music is influenced by the induced metrical structure. Two mech...
The present study investigated the learning of a culturally unfamiliar musical rhythm, leading to th...
We describe a computational model of rhythmic cognition that predicts expected onset times. A dynami...
Dynamic Attending Theory (DAT) dictates that temporal expectancies are formed when attention becomes...
We investigated how the surface and structural information of pitch and time in melodies contribute ...
Many connectionist approaches to musical expectancy and music composition let the question of "...
Predicting the timing of incoming information allows the brain to optimize information processing in...
Predicting the timing of incoming information allows the brain to optimize information processing in...
Presenting a stimulus at the most expected point in time should benefit its perceptual processing (J...
With Western, tonal music, the expectedness of any given note or chord can be estimated using variou...
With Western, tonal music, the expectedness of any given note or chord can be estimated using variou...
With Western, tonal music, the expectedness of any given note or chord can be estimated using variou...
Temporal regularities in speech, such as interdependencies in the timing of speech events, are thoug...
Contains fulltext : 74721.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)A definition is ...
Research into linguistic rhythm has been dominated by the idea that languages can be classified acco...
The processing of rhythmic events in music is influenced by the induced metrical structure. Two mech...
The present study investigated the learning of a culturally unfamiliar musical rhythm, leading to th...
We describe a computational model of rhythmic cognition that predicts expected onset times. A dynami...
Dynamic Attending Theory (DAT) dictates that temporal expectancies are formed when attention becomes...
We investigated how the surface and structural information of pitch and time in melodies contribute ...
Many connectionist approaches to musical expectancy and music composition let the question of "...
Predicting the timing of incoming information allows the brain to optimize information processing in...
Predicting the timing of incoming information allows the brain to optimize information processing in...
Presenting a stimulus at the most expected point in time should benefit its perceptual processing (J...
With Western, tonal music, the expectedness of any given note or chord can be estimated using variou...
With Western, tonal music, the expectedness of any given note or chord can be estimated using variou...
With Western, tonal music, the expectedness of any given note or chord can be estimated using variou...
Temporal regularities in speech, such as interdependencies in the timing of speech events, are thoug...
Contains fulltext : 74721.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)A definition is ...
Research into linguistic rhythm has been dominated by the idea that languages can be classified acco...