Longuet-Higgins H C
Proc R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 1979 Aug 31;205(1160):307-22. doi: 10.1098/rspb.1979.0067.
A common but none the less remarkable human faculty is the ability to recognize and reproduce familiar pieces of music. No two performances of a given piece will ever be acoustically identical, but a listener can perceive, in both, the same rhythmic and tonal relationships, and can judge whether a particular note or phrase was played out of time or out of tune. The problem considered in this lecture is that of describing the conceptual structures by which we represent Western classical music and the processes by which these structures are created. Some new hypotheses about the perception of rhythm and tonality have been cast in the form of a computer program which will transcribe a live keyboard performance of a classical melody into the equivalent of standard musical notation.
人类一种常见却同样非凡的能力是识别并再现熟悉的音乐片段。对于某一特定乐曲,没有两次演奏在听觉上会完全相同,但听众能够在两者之中感知到相同的节奏和音调关系,并且能够判断某个特定音符或乐句是否演奏得不合时宜或走调。本次讲座所探讨的问题是描述我们用以呈现西方古典音乐的概念结构以及这些结构的形成过程。关于节奏和音调感知的一些新假说已被编写成一个计算机程序,该程序能够将现场键盘演奏的古典旋律转录为等效的标准乐谱。