6533b82ffe1ef96bd12946c0

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Sight-reading expertise: cross-modality integration investigated using eye tracking

Véronique Drai-zerbibThierry BaccinoEmmanuel Bigand

subject

Music psychologymedia_common.quotation_subject[SHS.INFO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciences05 social sciencesPianoEye movement-Fixation (psychology)050105 experimental psychologySight-reading[SHS.INFO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciences[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDuration (music)Reading (process)Eye tracking0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychology (miscellaneous)Psychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMusicComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSCognitive psychologymedia_common

description

International audience; It is often said that experienced musicians are capable of hearing what they read (and vice versa). This suggests that they are able to process and to integrate multimodal information. The present study investigates this issue with an eye-tracking technique. Two groups of musicians chosen on the basis of their level of expertise (experts, non-experts) had to read excerpts of poorly-known classical piano music and play them on a keyboard. The experiment was run in two consecutive phases during which each excerpt was (1) read without playing and (2) sight-read (read and played). In half the conditions, the participants heard the music before the reading phases. The excerpts contained suggested fingering of variable difficulty (difficult, easy, or no fingering). Analyses of first-pass fixation duration, second-pass fixation duration, probability of re-fixation, and playing mistakes validated the hypothesized modal independence of information among expert musicians as compared to non-experts. The results are discussed in terms of the processing cues and retrieval structures postulated by Ericsson and Kintsch (1995) in their model of expert memory.

https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00644203