Halpern A R, Bartlett J C, Dowling W J
Department of Psychology, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania 17837, USA.
Psychol Aging. 1995 Sep;10(3):325-42. doi: 10.1037//0882-7974.10.3.325.
The authors examined the effects of age, musical experience, and characteristics of musical stimuli on a melodic short-term memory task in which participants had to recognize whether a tune was an exact transposition of another tune recently presented. Participants were musicians and nonmusicians between ages 18 and 30 or 60 and 80. In 4 experiments, the authors found that age and experience affected different aspects of the task, with experience becoming more influential when interference was provided during the task. Age and experience interacted only weakly, and neither age nor experience influenced the superiority of tonal over atonal materials. Recognition memory for the sequences did not reflect the same pattern of results as the transposition task. The implications of these results for theories of aging, experience, and music cognition are discussed.
作者们研究了年龄、音乐经验以及音乐刺激的特征对一项旋律短期记忆任务的影响,在该任务中,参与者必须识别一首曲子是否是最近呈现的另一首曲子的精确移调。参与者为年龄在18至30岁或60至80岁之间的音乐家和非音乐家。在4项实验中,作者们发现年龄和经验对任务的不同方面产生影响,当在任务过程中提供干扰时,经验的影响更大。年龄和经验之间的相互作用很微弱,年龄和经验均未影响调性材料相对于无调性材料的优越性。对序列的识别记忆并未反映出与移调任务相同的结果模式。本文讨论了这些结果对衰老、经验和音乐认知理论的意义。