• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 8
  • Tagged with
  • 11
  • 11
  • 7
  • 6
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A psychophysical investigation of auditory rhythmic beat perception

Seton, John Christopher January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
2

Working Memory for Rhythm

Klyn, Niall Andre Munson 05 January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
3

Neural correlates of beat and metre perception : the role of the inferior frontal gyrus

Hong, Sujin January 2015 (has links)
Temporal regularity and metrical organisation are important factors in beat and metre perception. The current thesis aims to investigate neural correlates of beat and metre perception in healthy non-musician volunteers, using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). In particular, the thesis focuses on determining the role of the Inferior Frontal Gyrus (IFG, in particular BA44/45) in beat and metre perception. The IFG has been proposed to be involved in higher order cognitive processes during various temporal sequencing, such as speech, movement, and music. Previous studies have shown that the temporal processing of rhythm activates auditory and sensorimotor areas, but the role of the IFG in rhythm perception has not yet been fully understood. Study 1 investigated beat perception in complex rhythms, in which the addition of volume accents either enhanced or weakened the beat perception, resulting in Unaccented, Beat Accented or Non-Beat Accented rhythms. Participants (N=14; 6 males) listened to rhythm pairs across all three conditions, and judged whether each rhythm pair was the same or different. Results showed that left IFG activation (BA44) was significantly greater during the Non-Beat Accented condition compared to Beat Accented condition, whereas the right IFG activation showed no significant difference between the two conditions. Study 2 investigated metre perception of a series of isochronous sequences, of which metrical organisation was grouped by 2/4 (C2), 3/4 (C3), or 4/4 (C4) using pitch accents, or remained without metrical grouping (or 1/4, C1). The same participants (N=15; 6 males) listened to the stimuli and indicated the perceived metrical grouping level. Results showed that the activation of bilateral IFG parametrically increased from C2 to C3 to C4. Interestingly, the activation was found to be significantly greater in C1 relative to C2, suggesting that involuntary subjective in C1 may increase the brain response. Converging results from both Study 1 and Study 2 demonstrated, firstly, that the bilateral IFG is involved in rhythm perception in addition to the auditory and sensorimotor areas, including primary and secondary auditory areas, supplementary motor areas, premotor areas, insula, and basal ganglia. Secondly, the left IFG (BA44) in particular was significantly modulated by the rhythmic complexity relating to both temporal regularity and metrical organisation, while showing the suppression during the Beat Accented rhythm condition of Study 1 and the binary pattern (C2) of Study 2. This thesis argues that the left IFG (BA44) may have the role the higher order cognitive processing, such as attention and prediction, in the perception of hierarchical structures in metric rhythms.
4

Cultural Influence on the Perception and Cognition of Musical Pulse and Meter

Kung, Hsiang-Ning 09 October 2017 (has links)
No description available.
5

Systematic investigation of factors contributing to music perception by cochlear implant users

Pretorius, Linda Luise 11 March 2013 (has links)
Cochlear implant (CI) devices afford many profoundly deaf individuals worldwide partially restored hearing ability. Although CI users achieve remarkable speech perception with contemporary multichannel CI devices, their music perception ability is generally unsatisfactory. Improved CI-mediated music perception ability requires that the underlying constraints hindering processing of music-relevant information need to be identified and understood. This study puts forward a systematic approach, informed by the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying music perception in normal hearing (NH), for investigating implant-mediated music perception. Psychoacoustical experiments were used to explore the extent to which music-relevant information delivered to the central auditory system following peripheral electrical stimulation supports music perception. Task-specific stimuli and test procedures were developed to assess perception of pitch, rhythm and loudness information, both as separate and in combined form, in sound-field listening conditions. CI users’ unsuccessful judgement of the musical character of short, novel single-voice melodies suggests that insufficient information reaches the central auditory processing system to effect a unified musical percept. This is despite sound field frequency discrimination behaviour being better than had been expected and rhythm perception ability with regard to short tone sequences of varying pitch and rhythmic complexity being comparable to that of NH listeners. CI listeners also performed similarly to NH listeners during pitch-dependent loudness perception tasks. Within the framework of a hierarchical, modular processing system underlying music perception, it appears that early pitch processing deficits propagate throughout the music processing system to exert an overriding inhibitory perceptual effect. The outcomes of this study not only underline the importance of delivering sufficient pitch information to the electrically stimulated auditory system but also show that music perception in CI-mediated hearing should be investigated and understood as the outcome of an integrated perceptual system. / Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2011. / Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering / Unrestricted
6

Factors Affecting the Perceived Rhythmic Complexity of Auditory Rhythms

Vinke, Louis Nicholas 26 April 2010 (has links)
No description available.
7

Exploring the neural entrainment to musical rhythms and meter : a steady-state evoked potential approach

Nozaradan, Sylvie 03 1900 (has links)
Thèse de doctorat réalisé en cotutelle avec l'Université catholique de Louvain, Belgique (Faculté de médecine, Institut de Neuroscience) / Percevoir et synchroniser ses mouvements à une pulsation régulière en musique est une capacité largement répandue chez l’Homme, et fondamentale aux comportements musicaux. La pulsation et la métrique en musique désignent généralement une organisation temporelle périodique perçue à partir de stimuli acoustiques complexes, et cette organisation perceptuelle implique souvent une mise en mouvement périodique spontanée du corps. Cependant, les mécanismes neuraux sous-tendant cette perception sont à l’heure actuelle encore méconnus. Le présent travail a donc eu pour objectif de développer une nouvelle approche expérimentale, inspirée par l’approche électrophysiologique des potentiels évoqués stationnaires, afin d’explorer les corrélats neuraux à la base de notre perception de la pulsation et de la métrique induite à l’écoute de rythmes musicaux. L’activité neurale évoquée en relation avec la perception d’une pulsation a été enregistrée par électroencéphalographie (EEG) chez des individus sains, dans divers contextes : (1) dans un contexte d’imagerie mentale d’une métrique appliquée de manière endogène sur un stimulus auditif, (2) dans un contexte d’induction spontanée d’une pulsation à l’écoute de patterns rythmiques musicaux, (3) dans un contexte d’interaction multisensorielle, et (4) dans un contexte de synchronisation sensorimotrice. Pris dans leur ensemble, les résultats de ces études corroborent l’hypothèse selon laquelle la perception de la pulsation en musique est sous-tendue par des processus de synchronisation et de résonance de l’activité neurale dans le cerveau humain. De plus, ces résultats suggèrent que l’approche développée dans le présent travail pourrait apporter un éclairage significatif pour comprendre les mécanismes neuraux de la perception de la pulsation et des rythmes musicaux, et, dans une perspective plus générale, pour explorer les mécanismes de synchronisation neurale. / The ability to perceive a regular beat in music and synchronize to it is a widespread human skill. Fundamental to musical behavior, beat and meter refer to the perception of periodicities while listening to musical rhythms, and usually involve spontaneous entrainment to move on these periodicities. However, the neural mechanisms underlying entrainment to beat and meter in Humans remain unclear. The present work tests a novel experimental approach, inspired by the steady-state evoked potential method, to explore the neural dynamics supporting the perception of rhythmic inputs. Using human electroencephalography (EEG), neural responses to beat and meter were recorded in various contexts: (1) mental imagery of meter, (2) spontaneous induction of a beat from rhythmic patterns, (3) multisensory integration, and (4) sensorimotor synchronization. Our results support the view that entrainment and resonance phenomena subtend the processing of musical rhythms in the human brain. Furthermore, our results suggest that this novel approach could help investigating the link between the phenomenology of musical beat and meter and neurophysiological evidence of a bias towards periodicities arising under certain circumstances in the nervous system. Hence, entrainment to music provides an original framework to explore general entrainment phenomena occurring at various levels, from the inter-neural to the inter-individual level.
8

Exploring the neural entrainment to musical rhythms and meter : a steady-state evoked potential approach

Nozaradan, Sylvie 03 1900 (has links)
Percevoir et synchroniser ses mouvements à une pulsation régulière en musique est une capacité largement répandue chez l’Homme, et fondamentale aux comportements musicaux. La pulsation et la métrique en musique désignent généralement une organisation temporelle périodique perçue à partir de stimuli acoustiques complexes, et cette organisation perceptuelle implique souvent une mise en mouvement périodique spontanée du corps. Cependant, les mécanismes neuraux sous-tendant cette perception sont à l’heure actuelle encore méconnus. Le présent travail a donc eu pour objectif de développer une nouvelle approche expérimentale, inspirée par l’approche électrophysiologique des potentiels évoqués stationnaires, afin d’explorer les corrélats neuraux à la base de notre perception de la pulsation et de la métrique induite à l’écoute de rythmes musicaux. L’activité neurale évoquée en relation avec la perception d’une pulsation a été enregistrée par électroencéphalographie (EEG) chez des individus sains, dans divers contextes : (1) dans un contexte d’imagerie mentale d’une métrique appliquée de manière endogène sur un stimulus auditif, (2) dans un contexte d’induction spontanée d’une pulsation à l’écoute de patterns rythmiques musicaux, (3) dans un contexte d’interaction multisensorielle, et (4) dans un contexte de synchronisation sensorimotrice. Pris dans leur ensemble, les résultats de ces études corroborent l’hypothèse selon laquelle la perception de la pulsation en musique est sous-tendue par des processus de synchronisation et de résonance de l’activité neurale dans le cerveau humain. De plus, ces résultats suggèrent que l’approche développée dans le présent travail pourrait apporter un éclairage significatif pour comprendre les mécanismes neuraux de la perception de la pulsation et des rythmes musicaux, et, dans une perspective plus générale, pour explorer les mécanismes de synchronisation neurale. / The ability to perceive a regular beat in music and synchronize to it is a widespread human skill. Fundamental to musical behavior, beat and meter refer to the perception of periodicities while listening to musical rhythms, and usually involve spontaneous entrainment to move on these periodicities. However, the neural mechanisms underlying entrainment to beat and meter in Humans remain unclear. The present work tests a novel experimental approach, inspired by the steady-state evoked potential method, to explore the neural dynamics supporting the perception of rhythmic inputs. Using human electroencephalography (EEG), neural responses to beat and meter were recorded in various contexts: (1) mental imagery of meter, (2) spontaneous induction of a beat from rhythmic patterns, (3) multisensory integration, and (4) sensorimotor synchronization. Our results support the view that entrainment and resonance phenomena subtend the processing of musical rhythms in the human brain. Furthermore, our results suggest that this novel approach could help investigating the link between the phenomenology of musical beat and meter and neurophysiological evidence of a bias towards periodicities arising under certain circumstances in the nervous system. Hence, entrainment to music provides an original framework to explore general entrainment phenomena occurring at various levels, from the inter-neural to the inter-individual level. / Thèse de doctorat réalisé en cotutelle avec l'Université catholique de Louvain, Belgique (Faculté de médecine, Institut de Neuroscience)
9

Taxonomy of interactive music systems according to a conceptualization of rhythm / Taxonomi för interaktiva musiksystem enligt en konceptualisering av rytm

Larsson Holmgren, David January 2023 (has links)
Multiple taxonomies and typologies related to interactive music systems have been made, focusing on improvisation, music generation and software based music agents. These studies are comprehensive but general in their analysis of the generated output and music interaction, lacking an in-depth consideration of rhythm. Based on relevant literature on rhythm perception, principles of music performance and interactive music systems, this thesis conceptualizes rhythm according to seven rhythm dimensions, and surveys the state-of-theart of interactive music systems. It considers eighteen interactive music systems affording music input and rhythm generation. These systems are analyzed and categorized according to a rhythm taxonomy extending on a prior taxonomy related to interactive music systems. Analyzing the data reveals dimensions of rhythm that need deeper considerations, which, in comparison with the conclusions of the prior taxonomy, results in design considerations and evaluation methods for the design of rhythmic generation and rhythmic interaction of future interactive music systems. / Det existerar ett flertal taxonomier och typologier relaterade till interaktiva musiksystem, med fokus på improvisation, musikgenerering och mjukvarubaserade intelligenta musikagenter. Dessa studier är omfattande men allmänna i sin analys av musikinteraktionen och musiken som genereras av systemen och saknar en djupgående beaktande av rytm. Baserat på relevant litteratur om rytmuppfattning, principer för musikframförande och interaktiva musiksystem, konceptualiserar denna master uppsats rytm enligt sju rytmdimensioner och undersöker forskningsfältet för interaktiva musiksystem. Arton interaktiva musiksystem som möjliggör musikinmatning och rytmgenerering undersöks. Dessa system analyseras och kategoriseras enligt en rytm-taxonomi som bygger på en tidigare taxonomi relaterad till interaktiva musiksystem. Genom dataanalys framkommer det vilka rytmdimensioner som är i behov av ytterligare efterforskning, vilket i jämförelse med slutsatserna av den tidigare taxonomin resulterar i designöverväganden och utvärderingsmetoder för framtida utveckling av interaktiva musiksystem med fokus på rytm.
10

Response to Goldberg, Holzapfel, and Guillot

London, Justin 23 October 2023 (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.1033 seconds