Suchfilter
Differences in Spectral and Fundamental Hearing between Absolute and Relative Pitch
- Autor: Martin Ebeling / Gerald Langner
- bei (Verlag): doi: Doi: https://dou.org/10.61712/HNPK7403
- Erscheinungsjahr: 2024
- Abstract:
Abstract
Consider a stimulus consisting of three sine tones with the same frequency spacing. For some listeners such a stimulus elicits a residual tone. Obviously, their hearing system interprets the three sine tones as three adjacent partials of a complex tone with a fundamental frequency equal to the frequency spacing. On the other hand, some subjects easily hear out some or even all single sine tones.
One can therefore distinguish between two hearing modes: the case of the residue pitch is referred to as fundamental hearing, whereas the ability to resolve single partials is called spectral hearing or overtone hearing.
Subjects may differ considerably in their capability for fundamental or spectral hearing. Depending on factors as the frequency region of the stimuli or the frequency of the residue pitch (missing fundamental) or depending on psychological factors as attention or individual hearing dispositions, subjects may even change between both modes of hearing.The present study demonstrates that possessors of absolute pitch show significant differences in spectral versus fundamental hearing compared to possessors of relative pitch. In some frequency regions, possessors and non-possessors of absolute pitch prefer either fundamental hearing or spectral hearing quite individually and often may change between both modes of hearing. However, statistically, possessors of absolute pitch show a significantly higher preference for perceiving a residue tone than possessors of relative pitch do.
- Anhänge / Aufsatz:
- Stichwörter / Suchbegriffe: absolute pitch fundamental hearing spectral hearing peridicity detection inner oscillations