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Tonal priming is resistant to changes in pitch height
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Tonal priming is resistant to changes in pitch height

J.B. Prince, D.T. Vuvan, M.A. Schmuckler and T.T. Scott-Clark
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, Vol.77(6), pp.2011-2020
2015
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Abstract

Research on tonal priming has consistently shown that tonally expected events are processed more efficiently and has confirmed that the locus of the effect is cognitive rather than sensory. However, it is also important to investigate the role of pitch height, because models of tonal priming collapse across octaves, yet it is possible that pitch height may modulate the effectiveness of tonal priming. We systematically tested this issue by varying the pitch heights of a related (tonic) or a less-related (subdominant) target chord following a tonal context. Musically untrained participants (N = 30) made speeded consonant/dissonant judgments of the final chord of an eight-chord sequence. The effects of tonal priming emerged in accuracy and reaction time measures for all octaves, except for a ceiling effect on accuracy in the matching (original pitch height) condition. In a second experiment, we increased the shift to two octaves and compressed the chords to eliminate overlap between the target and context chords; again, tonal priming emerged. These findings have implications for the behavioral study of tonal priming and support the assumption of octave equivalence in computational models.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
10 Arts & Humanities
10.240 Music
10.240.657 Music Cognition
Web Of Science research areas
Psychology
Psychology, Experimental
ESI research areas
Psychiatry/Psychology
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