scholarly journals Dissociating sensory and cognitive theories of harmony perception through computational modeling

Author(s):  
Peter Harrison ◽  
Marcus Thomas Pearce

Two approaches exist for explaining harmonic expectation. The sensory approach claims that harmonic expectation is a low-level process driven by sensory responses to acoustic properties of musical sounds. Conversely, the cognitive approach describes harmonic expectation as a high-level cognitive process driven by the recognition of syntactic structure learned through experience. Many previous studies have sought to distinguish these two hypotheses, largely yielding support for the cognitive hypothesis. However, subsequent re-analysis has shown that most of these results can parsimoniously be explained by a computational model from the sensory tradition, namely Leman’s (2000) model of auditory short- term memory (Bigand, Delbé, Poulin-Charronnat, Leman, & Tillmann, 2014). In this research we re-examine the explanatory power of auditory short-term memory models, and compare them to a new model in the Information Dynamics Of Music (IDyOM) tradition, which simulates a cognitive theory of harmony perception based on statistical learning and probabilistic prediction. We test the ability of these models to predict the surprisingness of chords within chord sequences (N = 300), as reported by a sample group of university undergraduates (N = 50). In contrast to previous studies, which typically use artificial stimuli composed in a classical idiom, we use naturalistic chord sequences sampled from a large dataset of popular music. Our results show that the auditory short-term memory models have remarkably low explanatory power in this context. In contrast, the new statistical learning model predicts surprisingness ratings relatively effectively. We conclude that auditory short-term memory is insufficient to explain harmonic expectation, and that cognitive processes of statistical learning and probabilistic prediction provide a viable alternative.

1980 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Byron J.T Morgan ◽  
Chris Robertson

2001 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 126-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ole Jensen ◽  
John E. Lisman

A physiological model for short-term memory (STM) based on dual theta (5–10 Hz) and gamma (20–60 Hz) oscillation was proposed by Lisman and Idiart (1995). In this model a memory is represented by groups of neurons that fire in the same gamma cycle. According to this model, capacity is determined by the number of gamma cycles that occur within the slower theta cycle. We will discuss here the implications of recent reports on theta oscillations recorded in humans performing the Sternberg task. Assuming that the oscillatory memory models are correct, these findings can help determine STM capacity.


Author(s):  
Josje Verhagen ◽  
Elise de Bree

Abstract Earlier work indicates that bilingualism may positively affect statistical learning, but leaves open whether a bilingual benefit is (1) found during learning rather than in a post-hoc test following a learning phase and (2) explained by enhanced verbal short-term memory skill in the bilinguals. Forty-one bilingual and 56 monolingual preschoolers completed a serial reaction time task and a nonword repetition task (NWR). Linear mixed-effect regressions indicated that the bilinguals showed a stronger decrease in reaction times over the regular blocks of the task than the monolinguals. No group differences in accuracy-based measures were found. NWR performance, which did not differ between the groups, did not account for the attested effect of bilingualism. These results provide partial support for effects of bilingualism on statistical learning, which appear during learning and are not due to enhanced verbal short-term memory. Taken together, these findings add to a growing body of research on effects of bilingualism on statistical learning, and constitute a first step towards investigating the factors which may underlie such effects.


1996 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 183-206
Author(s):  
Reuven Tsur ◽  
Yehosheva Bentov

This article explores the correlations and relative frequencies of certain prosodic structures in Mediaeval Hebrew Poetry, where metre is based on systematic manipulation of shorter and longer vowels (schwas versus full vowels). These correlations and frequencies cannot be accounted for by the explicit poetics of the period. It is assumed here that they reflect the tacit intuitions of the poets. The article presents several cognitive mechanisms underlying the experiencing of poetic rhythm, on the assumption that while metrical conventions may change from time to time and from style to style, the cognitive mechanisms underlying them show remarkable consistencies over considerable periods of time, and perhaps even across cultural traditions. The cognitive assumptions of the article include Gestalt theory, as well as the hypotheses concerning “limited channel capacity,” and the nature of short-term memory.


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