Search results for "melo"

showing 10 items of 291 documents

Leaping across Modalities: Speed Regulation Messages in Audio and Tactile Domains

2010

This study examines three design bases for speed regulation messages by testing their ability to function across modalities. Two of the design bases utilise a method originally intended for sound design and the third uses a method meant for tactile feedback. According to the experimental results, all designs communicate the intended meanings similarly in audio and tactile domains. It was also found that melodic (frequency changes) and rhythmic (segmentation) features of stimuli function differently for each type of message.

MelodyModalitiesbusiness.industryComputer scienceSpeech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectSound designRhythmSegmentationComputer visionArtificial intelligenceFunction (engineering)businessmedia_common
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Perceived complexity of western and African folk melodies by western and African listeners

2006

Stylistic knowledge and enculturation play a significant role in music perception, although the importance of psychophysical cues in perception of emotions in music has been acknowledged. The psychophysical cues, such as melodic complexity, are assumed to be independent of musical experience. A cross-cultural comparison was used to investigate the ratings of melodic complexity of western and African participants for western (Experiment 1) and African folk songs (Experiment 2). A range of melodic complexity measures was developed to discover what factors contribute to complexity. On the whole, the groups gave similar patterns of responses in both experiments. In Experiment 1, western folk s…

MelodyRange (music)media_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesCognition06 humanities and the artsMusicalCross-cultural studies050105 experimental psychologyLinguistics060404 musicStyle (sociolinguistics)EnculturationPerception0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychology (miscellaneous)Psychology0604 artsMusicmedia_commonPsychology of Music
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Simulating music with associative self-organizing maps

2018

Abstract We present an architecture able to recognise pitches and to internally simulate likely continuations of partially heard melodies. Our architecture consists of a novel version of the Associative Self-Organizing Map (A-SOM) with generalized ancillary connections. We tested the performance of our architecture with melodies from a publicly available database containing 370 Bach chorale melodies. The results showed that the architecture could learn to represent and perfectly simulate the remaining 20% of three different interrupted melodies when using a context length of 8 centres of activity in the A-SOM. These promising and encouraging results show that our architecture offers somethi…

MelodySelf-organizing mapComputer scienceCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)02 engineering and technologycomputer.software_genre050105 experimental psychologyArtificial Intelligence0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesInternal simulationArchitectureAssociative propertySettore ING-INF/05 - Sistemi Di Elaborazione Delle Informazionibusiness.industry05 social sciencesInformation and Computer ScienceNeural networkAssociative self-organizing map020201 artificial intelligence & image processingArtificial intelligencebusinesscomputerMusicNatural language processingBiologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures
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Automated Extraction of Motivic Patterns and Application to the Analysis of Debussy’s Syrinx

2009

A methodology for automated extraction of repeated patterns in discrete time series data is presented, dedicated to the discovery of musical motives in symbolic music representations. The basic principle of the approach consists in a search for closed patterns in a multi-dimensional parametric space, comprising various features related to melodic and rhythmic aspects, which can be organized into note-based and interval-based descriptions. The pattern description is further reduced through a lossless pruning of the sequence description. This requires in particular a detailed estimation of the specificity relations between patterns. For instance, a pattern is more specific than its suffix, an…

MelodySequencebusiness.industryPattern recognitionComponent (UML)Formal concept analysisRedundancy (engineering)Artificial intelligencePruning (decision trees)SuffixbusinessAlgorithmMathematicsParametric statistics
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Statistical features and perceived similarity of folk melodies

2001

Listeners are sensitive to pitch distributional information in music (N. Oram & L. L. Cuddy, 1995; C. L. Krumhansl, J. Louhivuori, P.Toiviainen, T. Järvinen, & T. Eerola, 1999). However, it is uncertain whether frequency-based musical features are sufficient to explain the similarity judgments that underlie listeners' classification processes. A similarity rating experiment was designed to determine the effectiveness of these features in predicting listeners' similarity ratings. The material consisted of 15 melodies representing five folk music styles. A multiple regression analysis showed that the similarity of frequency-based musical properties could account for a moderate amount …

MelodySimilarity (network science)Speech recognitionStatisticsA moderate amountRegression analysisPsychologyMusicFolk music
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Autocorrelation in meter induction: the role of accent structure.

2006

The performance of autocorrelation-based meter induction was tested with two large collections of folk melodies, consisting of approximately 13 000 melodies for which the correct meters were available. The performance was measured by the proportion of melodies whose meter was correctly classified by a discriminant function. Furthermore, it was examined whether including different melodic accent types would improve the classification performance. By determining the components of the autocorrelation functions that were significant in the classification it was found that periodicity in note onset locations was the most important cue for the determination of meter. Of the melodic accents includ…

MelodyTime FactorsAcoustics and Ultrasonicsbusiness.industryVoice QualityAutocorrelationDiscriminant AnalysisPattern recognitionLinear discriminant analysisMusical acousticsAccent (music)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Binary classificationDiscriminant function analysisTime PerceptionAuditory PerceptionVoiceMetreHumansArtificial intelligencebusinessPitch PerceptionMusicMathematicsThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
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2018

A music reader has to “look ahead” from the notes currently being played—this has usually been called the Eye-Hand Span. Given the restrictions on processing time due to tempo and meter, the Early Attraction Hypothesis suggests that sight readers are likely to locally increase the span of looking ahead in the face of complex upcoming symbols (or symbol relationships). We argue that such stimulus-driven effects on looking ahead are best studied using a measure of Eye-Time Span (ETS) which redefines looking ahead as the metrical distance between the position of a fixation in the score and another position that corresponds to the point of metrical time at fixation onset. In two experiments of…

MelodyVision spanMusic psychology05 social sciences06 humanities and the artsAttraction050105 experimental psychologySensory SystemsSight-reading060404 musicSightOphthalmologyEye tracking0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEye–hand spanPsychology0604 artsCognitive psychologyJournal of Eye Movement Research
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Influence of expressive versus mechanical musical performance on short-term memory for musical excerpts

2012

Recognition memory for details of musical phrases (discrimination between targets and similar lures) improves for up to 15 s following the presentation of a target, during continuous listening to the ongoing piece. This is attributable to binding of stimulus features during that time interval. The ongoing-listening paradigm is an ecologically valid approach for investigating short-term memory, but previous studies made use of relatively mechanical MIDI-produced stimuli. The present study assessed whether expressive performances would modulate the previously reported finding. Given that expressive performances introduced slight differences between initially presented targets and their target…

Melodybinding[ SHS.MUSIQ ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing artsshort-term memoryFace (sociological concept)Short-term memoryContext (language use)Musicalexpressivity050105 experimental psychologyTask (project management)03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesExpressive Suppression[SPI.ACOU]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Acoustics [physics.class-ph][SHS.MUSIQ]Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing artsUltimatum game[ SPI.ACOU ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Acoustics [physics.class-ph]05 social sciencesmelodiesPsychologymemory improvementSocial psychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMusicCognitive psychology
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Motown, Disco, and Drumming

2019

In a study of tempo perception, London, Burger, Thompson, and Toiviainen (2016) presented participants with digitally ‘‘tempo-shifted’’ R&B songs (i.e., sped up or slowed down without otherwise altering their pitch or timbre). They found that while participants’ relative tempo judgments of original versus altered versions were correct, they no longer corresponded to the beat rate of each stimulus. Here we report on three experiments that further probe the relation(s) between beat rate, tempo-shifting, beat salience, melodic structure, and perceived tempo. Experiment 1 is a replication of London et al. (2016) using the original stimuli. Experiment 2 replaces the Motown stimuli with disco…

Melodymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesStimulus (physiology)050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSalience (neuroscience)PerceptionBeat rate0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologyTimbre030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMusicCognitive psychologymedia_commonMusic Perception
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Influence of virtual room acoustics on choir singing.

2015

(ProQuest: ... denotes formulae omitted)The aesthetic appreciation of a choir performance heavily relies on both the singers' skills and the acoustical characteristics of the venue. Choir directors usually know that choral performances are greatly influenced by room acoustics, while the choir singers experience the difference between singing in a small room for practice and performing in a comparatively large space like a concert hall. Clearly, it would be beneficial for musicians to understand both the effect of room acoustical features on their performance and how best to adjust tempo, phrasing, dynamics, and other musical parameters with respect to a given venue's acoustical environment.…

Melodymedia_common.quotation_subjectchoir singingGeneral MedicineMusicalArtRoom acousticsVisual artsUnisonvirtual roomsta6131kuorolauluChoirPolyphonyMOZARTSingingacousticsmedia_commonPsychomusicology: Music, Mind, and Brain
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