Search results for "Dissonance"

showing 10 items of 49 documents

Bodies Making Spaces: Understanding the Airport as a Site of Dissonance

2019

AbstractTrakilović theorizes the airport as a site where cultural/European notions of belonging are negotiated and controlled. Focusing on Schiphol airport in Amsterdam, the chapter approaches both the airport itself as well as its nearby detention center as one complex cultural phenomenon, from which Schiphol emerges as a site of heritage dissonance. Taking a phenomenological approach, the chapter explores what it means to be an embodied subject at the airport, taking the narrative of a Syrian newcomer who is relocated to the detention center as well as the author’s own experience of the airport as its analytical starting points. The selective processes of in- and exclusion at the airport …

05 social sciences0211 other engineering and technologies0507 social and economic geographySubject (philosophy)021107 urban & regional planning02 engineering and technologyCultural phenomenonAestheticsEmbodied cognitionCognitive dissonanceNarrativeCenter (algebra and category theory)Sociology050703 geography
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Introduction: Europe, Heritage and Memory—Dissonant Encounters and Explorations

2019

AbstractThe introduction to Dissonant Heritages and Memories in Contemporary Europe theoretically grounds the book’s various problematizations of heritage and identity struggles in Europe today, including the heritage policies of the EU and other intergovernmental organizations, struggles over ethnographic and historical exhibitions, activist practices, and dissonant memories. By discussing these struggles and their problematizations, the introduction connects the book to a wide range of ongoing debates across the humanities and social sciences. At the same time, it discusses how convergences and divergences within and between the volume’s chapters foster new insights regarding the concepts…

05 social sciencesIdentity (social science)06 humanities and the artsConsonance and dissonance0506 political scienceHeritage studies060104 historyExhibitionEmpirical researchAestheticsEthnography050602 political science & public administrationCognitive dissonance0601 history and archaeologySociology
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Effects of autonomy-supportive and controlling styles on situational self-determined motivation: some unexpected results of the commitment procedure.

2015

International audience; Distinct and simultaneous effects of autonomy-supportive and controlling styles, usually considered as mutually exclusive, on situational self-determined motivation are tested. In Study 1, economics students ( N = 100; 57 men, 43 women; M age = 21.5 yr.) were randomly assigned to one of the four experimental conditions (high vs. low) of autonomy supportive and / or controlling behaviors during a task. Results supported the independence of those constructs. An unexpected effect in regards to Self-determination Theory was found in the Low autonomy – High control condition in which self-determined motivation was observed. The interpretation for this specific condition, …

AdultMaleMotivationAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectControl (management)[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyMutually exclusive eventsTask (project management)Developmental psychologyYoung AdultPersonal AutonomyCognitive dissonanceHumansFemaleSituational ethicsPsychologySocial BehaviorSocial psychologyGeneral PsychologyAutonomymedia_commonPsychological reports
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Neural discrimination of nonprototypical chords in music experts and laymen:an MEG study

2009

Abstract At the level of the auditory cortex, musicians discriminate pitch changes more accurately than nonmusicians. However, it is not agreed upon how sound familiarity and musical expertise interact in the formation of pitch-change discrimination skills, that is, whether musicians possess musical pitch discrimination abilities that are generally more accurate than in nonmusicians or, alternatively, whether they may be distinguished from nonmusicians particularly with respect to the discrimination of nonprototypical sounds that do not play a reference role in Western tonal music. To resolve this, we used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to measure the change-related magnetic mismatch response…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyCognitive NeuroscienceMismatch negativityAudiologyRecognition (Psychology)Auditory cortex050105 experimental psychologyPitch Discrimination03 medical and health sciencesYoung AdultDiscrimination Psychological0302 clinical medicineReference ValuesmedicineAuditory systemHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAttention10. No inequalityCerebral CortexDiscrimination (Psychology)Communicationmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMajor and minor05 social sciencesMagnetoencephalographyRecognition PsychologyMagnetoencephalographyConsonance and dissonancemedicine.anatomical_structureAcoustic StimulationEvoked Potentials AuditoryChord (music)FemalePsychologybusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMusicPitch (Music)
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A cognitive architecture for music perception exploiting conceptual spaces

2015

A cognitive architecture for a musical agent is presented. The architecture extends and complete an architecture for computer vision previously developed by the author by taking into account many relationships between vision and music perception. The focus of the agent architecture is an intermediate conceptual area between the subconceptual and linguistic areas. A conceptual space for the perception of tones and intervals is thus presented, based on the dissonance measure of the tones. Problems and future works of the proposed approach are finally discussed.

Cognitive scienceSettore ING-INF/05 - Sistemi Di Elaborazione Delle Informazionibusiness.industryComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectMusicalCognitive architectureFocus (linguistics)Music perceptionPerceptionConceptual SpacesCognitive dissonanceMusic perceptionArtificial intelligenceArchitecturebusinessAgent architecturemedia_common
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The erosion of personal norms and cognitive dissonance

2016

ABSTRACTIn this article, we study how personal norms and behaviour interact and evolve when agents try to reduce cognitive dissonance, and how this dynamic relates to Nash equilibrium. We find that in long run, agents play, and norms prescribe, Nash equilibrium in material payoffs (in the absence of norms). Our model captures two main facts: (i) norms erode along the play of the game; (ii) the erosion of norms depends on the set of possible economic choices, so that the policy maker can potentially influence them.

Computer Science::Computer Science and Game TheoryEconomics and EconometricsSelf-justification05 social sciencesPolicy makerCognitive dissonancenorm dynamicsSettore SECS-P/01 - ECONOMIA POLITICA050105 experimental psychologyNash equilibrium0506 political scienceMicroeconomicssymbols.namesakeNash equilibriumCognitive dissonance; dominant strategies; Nash equilibrium; norm dynamics; Economics and Econometricsdominant strategies050602 political science & public administrationsymbolsCognitive dissonanceEconomics0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSet (psychology)Mathematical economics
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Different Brain Mechanisms Mediate Sensitivity to Sensory Consonance and Harmonic Context: Evidence from Auditory Event-Related Brain Potentials

2001

Abstract The goal of this study was to analyze the time-course of sensory (bottom-up) and cognitive (top-down) processes that govern musical harmonic expectancy. Eight-chord sequences were presented to 12 musicians and 12 nonmusicians. Expectations for the last chord were manipulated both at the sensory level (i.e., the last chord was sensory consonant or dissonant) and at the cognitive level (the harmonic function of the target was varied by manipulating the harmonic context built up by the first six chords of the sequence). Changes in the harmonic function of the target chord mainly modulate the amplitude of a positive component peaking around 300 msec (P3) after target onset, reflecting …

ConsonantAdultMaleAuditory eventCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectSensory systemPerceptionHumansLate positive componentmedia_commonCommunicationbusiness.industry[SCCO.NEUR] Cognitive science/NeuroscienceCognitionConsonance and dissonanceMiddle AgedAcoustic StimulationAuditory PerceptionEvoked Potentials AuditoryChord (music)FemalebusinessPsychologyNeuroscienceMusic[SDV.NEU.SC] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Cognitive Sciences
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Global context effects on musical expectancy.

1997

The effects of global harmonic contexts on expectancy formation were studied in a set of three experiments. Eight-chord sequences were presented to subjects. Expectations for the last chord were varied by manipulating the harmonic context created by the first six: in one context, the last chord was part of an authentic cadence (V–I), whereas in the other, it was a fourth harmonic degree following a full cadence (I–IV). Given this change in harmonic function, the last chord was assumed to be more expected in the former context, all the other local parameters being held constant. The effect of global context on expectancy formation was supported by the fact that subjects reported a lower degr…

ConsonantExpectancy theoryContext effectmedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyConsonance and dissonanceSensory SystemsCognitionHarmonic functionPerceptionAuditory PerceptionChord (music)HumansCadencePsychologySocial psychologyGeneral PsychologyMusicmedia_commonCognitive psychologyPerceptionpsychophysics
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Harmony perception and regularity of spike trains in a simple auditory model

2013

A probabilistic approach for investigating the phenomena of dissonance and consonance in a simple auditory sensory model, composed by two sensory neurons and one interneuron, is presented. We calculated the interneuron’s firing statistics, that is the interspike interval statistics of the spike train at the output of the interneuron, for consonant and dissonant inputs in the presence of additional "noise", representing random signals from other, nearby neurons and from the environment. We find that blurry interspike interval distributions (ISIDs) characterize dissonant accords, while quite regular ISIDs characterize consonant accords. The informational entropy of the non-Markov spike train …

ConsonantInterneuronSpeech recognitionSpike trainmedia_common.quotation_subjectSensory systemConsonance and dissonanceSound perceptionSettore FIS/03 - Fisica Della Materiamedicine.anatomical_structureAuditory system consonant and dissonant accords environmental noise hidden Markov chain informational entropy regularityPerceptionmedicineAuditory systemMathematicsmedia_commonAIP Conference Proceedings
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Children's implicit knowledge of harmony in Western music.

2005

Three experiments examined children's knowledge of harmony in Western music. The children heard a series of chords followed by a final, target chord. In Experiment 1, French 6- and 11-year-olds judged whether the target was sung with the vowel /i/ or /u/. In Experiment 2, Australian 8- and 11-year-olds judged whether the target was played on a piano or a trumpet. In Experiment 3, Canadian 8- and 11-year-olds judged whether the target sounded good (i.e. consonant) or bad (dissonant). The target was either the most stable chord in the established musical key (i.e. the tonic, based on do, the first note of the scale) or a less stable chord. Performance was faster (Experiments 1, 2 and 3) and m…

ConsonantMaleCanadaCognitive NeuroscienceModels PsychologicalCognitionVowelDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansChildPitch PerceptionHarmony (color)Analysis of VarianceKnowledge levelPianoAustraliaConsonance and dissonanceSyntaxLinguisticsAuditory PerceptionChord (music)FemaleFrancePsychologyMusicCognitive psychologyPsychoacousticsDevelopmental science
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