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Bidirectional influences of pitch and time in auditory perception / Bidirectional influences of pitch and time

Auditory rhythms play a central role in human culture and communication, through both speech and music. The ability to track and predict the organization of events in time helps humans optimize attention, perceive emotion, coordinate actions, and understand social affiliations. The importance of these functions has inspired substantial efforts to model rhythm perception. However, despite a wealth of evidence that pitch influences rhythm perception, with higher speech and music perceived as faster, leading theories and models of rhythm perception have yet to incorporate these effects of pitch. This thesis addresses several empirical questions that have stood in the way of integrating pitch into these models. Specifically, 1) whether the perception of higher pitches as faster generalizes across more than two octaves and above 1000 Hz, 2) whether pitch influences synchronized motor tempo, and 3) whether pitch–timing interactions are bidirectional, such that tempo changes also influence perceived pitch. To answer these questions, we present data from ten experiments including subjective tempo ratings, sensorimotor timing, temporal discrimination, and pitch discrimination tasks. Our results suggest the existence of two separate effects of pitch on perceived timing. First, we present evidence in Chapters 2 and 3 for a unidirectional, negative quadratic effect of absolute pitch on perceived tempo. In this effect, both subjective and sensorimotor tempo rise with pitch between 110 and 440 Hz, peak somewhere between 440 and 1760 Hz, and decrease with pitch above that peak. In Chapters 4 and 5, we present evidence for a bidirectional and approximately linear bias to perceive higher pitches as faster and earlier sounds as higher. We propose that the former effect is most likely innate and a product of the structure of the auditory system, whereas the latter is learned from world structure and originates from cue integration at a later stage of processing. / Dissertation / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Our ability to understand rhythms and find “the beat” in music and speech is key to how we interact with the world and with one another. Rhythm and music are important in every known culture, and synchronizing to rhythms helps us form connections, coordinate, and communicate with others. This thesis explores how another aspect of music—pitch—changes how we hear the beat. Past research suggests music sounds faster to us when played at a higher pitch. Through our work, we discovered that the reverse is also true—musical pitch starts to sound higher as the rhythm speeds up. We also show that pitch changes how fast we move while trying to keep the beat. Studying these pitch and rhythm illusions helps us to better understand how our brains combine information about the melody and rhythm of music, and may help us to develop better medical alarms in the future.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/30190
Date January 2024
CreatorsPazdera, Jesse
ContributorsTrainor, Laurel, Psychology
Source SetsMcMaster University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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