The identity of a melody resides in its sequence of pitches and durations, both of which exhibit surface details as well as structural properties. In this study, pitch contour (pattern of ups and downs) served as pitch surface information, and tonality (musical key) as pitch structure; in the temporal dimension, surface information was the ordinal duration ratios of adjacent notes (rhythm), and meter (beat, or pulse) comprised the structure. Factorially manipulating the preservation or alteration of all of these forms of information in 17 novel melodies (typifying Western music) enabled measuring their effect on perceived melodic similarity. In Experiment 1, 34 participants (varied musical training) rated the perceived similarity of melody ...
In two experiments participants rated the similarity of melodic contours presented as auditory (melo...
In typical Western music, pitch often dominates time, perhaps because pitch exhibits more structure....
Sounds that evoke a sense of pitch are ubiquitous in our environment and important for speech, music...
The identity of a melody resides in its sequence of pitches and durations, both of which exhibit sur...
The relationship between pitch-interval (precise intervals between notes) and contour (sequence of u...
According to Western music theory, familiar melodies containing alterations which shift them a long ...
Melodic contour, the shape of a melody without reference to the individual notes, is important in th...
The nature of melodic similarity is interrogated through a survey of the different means by which th...
Mentor: Andrew J. OxenhamOn hearing a sequence of pitches, listeners develop expectations for how th...
This paper presents an approach to the analysis of melodic similarity as a determinant of melody st...
We investigated how the surface and structural information of pitch and time in melodies contribute ...
In typical Western music, important pitches occur disproportionately often on important beats, refer...
In two experiments participants rated the similarity of melodic contours presented as auditory (melo...
Two experiments examined listeners' use of contour information to drive memory for rhythmic patterns...
Two experiments investigated the role of pitch-related information in tonality induction. In both ex...
In two experiments participants rated the similarity of melodic contours presented as auditory (melo...
In typical Western music, pitch often dominates time, perhaps because pitch exhibits more structure....
Sounds that evoke a sense of pitch are ubiquitous in our environment and important for speech, music...
The identity of a melody resides in its sequence of pitches and durations, both of which exhibit sur...
The relationship between pitch-interval (precise intervals between notes) and contour (sequence of u...
According to Western music theory, familiar melodies containing alterations which shift them a long ...
Melodic contour, the shape of a melody without reference to the individual notes, is important in th...
The nature of melodic similarity is interrogated through a survey of the different means by which th...
Mentor: Andrew J. OxenhamOn hearing a sequence of pitches, listeners develop expectations for how th...
This paper presents an approach to the analysis of melodic similarity as a determinant of melody st...
We investigated how the surface and structural information of pitch and time in melodies contribute ...
In typical Western music, important pitches occur disproportionately often on important beats, refer...
In two experiments participants rated the similarity of melodic contours presented as auditory (melo...
Two experiments examined listeners' use of contour information to drive memory for rhythmic patterns...
Two experiments investigated the role of pitch-related information in tonality induction. In both ex...
In two experiments participants rated the similarity of melodic contours presented as auditory (melo...
In typical Western music, pitch often dominates time, perhaps because pitch exhibits more structure....
Sounds that evoke a sense of pitch are ubiquitous in our environment and important for speech, music...