Olsen Kirk N, Stevens Catherine J, Dean Roger T, Bailes Freya
The MARCS Institute, University of Western Sydney, Australia.
The MARCS Institute, University of Western Sydney, Australia; School of Social Sciences and Psychology, University of Western Sydney, Australia.
Acta Psychol (Amst). 2014 Jun;149:117-28. doi: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2014.03.007.
The aim of this work was to investigate perceived loudness change in response to melodies that increase (up-ramp) or decrease (down-ramp) in acoustic intensity, and the interaction with other musical factors such as melodic contour, tempo, and tonality (tonal/atonal). A within-subjects design manipulated direction of linear intensity change (up-ramp, down-ramp), melodic contour (ascending, descending), tempo, and tonality, using single ramp trials and paired ramp trials, where single up-ramps and down-ramps were assembled to create continuous up-ramp/down-ramp or down-ramp/up-ramp pairs. Twenty-nine (Exp 1) and thirty-six (Exp 2) participants rated loudness continuously in response to trials with monophonic 13-note piano melodies lasting either 6.4s or 12s. Linear correlation coefficients >.89 between loudness and time show that time-series loudness responses to dynamic up-ramp and down-ramp melodies are essentially linear across all melodies. Therefore, 'indirect' loudness change derived from the difference in loudness at the beginning and end points of the continuous response was calculated. Down-ramps were perceived to change significantly more in loudness than up-ramps in both tonalities and at a relatively slow tempo. Loudness change was also greater for down-ramps presented with a congruent descending melodic contour, relative to an incongruent pairing (down-ramp and ascending melodic contour). No differential effect of intensity ramp/melodic contour congruency was observed for up-ramps. In paired ramp trials assessing the possible impact of ramp context, loudness change in response to up-ramps was significantly greater when preceded by down-ramps, than when not preceded by another ramp. Ramp context did not affect down-ramp perception. The contribution to the fields of music perception and psychoacoustics are discussed in the context of real-time perception of music, principles of music composition, and performance of musical dynamics.
这项研究的目的是调查在响应于声强增加(上升斜坡)或减少(下降斜坡)的旋律时感知到的响度变化,以及与其他音乐因素(如旋律轮廓、节奏和调性(调性/无调性))的相互作用。采用被试内设计,通过单斜坡试验和配对斜坡试验,操纵线性强度变化方向(上升斜坡、下降斜坡)、旋律轮廓(上升、下降)、节奏和调性,其中将单个上升斜坡和下降斜坡组合以创建连续的上升斜坡/下降斜坡或下降斜坡/上升斜坡对。29名(实验1)和36名(实验2)参与者对持续6.4秒或12秒的单音13音符钢琴旋律的试验连续评定响度。响度与时间之间的线性相关系数>.89表明,在所有旋律中,对动态上升斜坡和下降斜坡旋律的时间序列响度响应基本呈线性。因此,计算了从连续响应的起点和终点的响度差异得出的“间接”响度变化。在两种调性中以及在相对较慢的节奏下,下降斜坡在响度上的变化被认为比上升斜坡显著更大。与不一致的配对(下降斜坡和上升旋律轮廓)相比,具有一致下降旋律轮廓的下降斜坡的响度变化也更大。对于上升斜坡,未观察到强度斜坡/旋律轮廓一致性的差异效应。在评估斜坡背景可能影响的配对斜坡试验中,上升斜坡之前有下降斜坡时,响应上升斜坡的响度变化显著大于没有另一个斜坡之前的情况。斜坡背景不影响下降斜坡的感知。在音乐实时感知、音乐创作原则和音乐动态表现的背景下,讨论了对音乐感知和心理声学领域的贡献。