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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 1482, 2024 Feb 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38369535

ABSTRACT

The phenomenon of musical consonance is an essential feature in diverse musical styles. The traditional belief, supported by centuries of Western music theory and psychological studies, is that consonance derives from simple (harmonic) frequency ratios between tones and is insensitive to timbre. Here we show through five large-scale behavioral studies, comprising 235,440 human judgments from US and South Korean populations, that harmonic consonance preferences can be reshaped by timbral manipulations, even as far as to induce preferences for inharmonic intervals. We show how such effects may suggest perceptual origins for diverse scale systems ranging from the gamelan's slendro scale to the tuning of Western mean-tone and equal-tempered scales. Through computational modeling we show that these timbral manipulations dissociate competing psychoacoustic mechanisms underlying consonance, and we derive an updated computational model combining liking of harmonicity, disliking of fast beats (roughness), and liking of slow beats. Altogether, this work showcases how large-scale behavioral experiments can inform classical questions in auditory perception.


Subject(s)
Music , Humans , Psychoacoustics , Music/psychology , Auditory Perception , Emotions , Judgment , Acoustic Stimulation
2.
J Exp Psychol Gen ; 153(3): 573-589, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38386385

ABSTRACT

Shepard's universal law of generalization is a remarkable hypothesis about how intelligent organisms should perceive similarity. In its broadest form, the universal law states that the level of perceived similarity between a pair of stimuli should decay as a concave function of their distance when embedded in an appropriate psychological space. While extensively studied, evidence in support of the universal law has relied on low-dimensional stimuli and small stimulus sets that are very different from their real-world counterparts. This is largely because pairwise comparisons-as required for similarity judgments-scale quadratically in the number of stimuli. We provide strong evidence for the universal law in a naturalistic high-dimensional regime by analyzing an existing data set of 214,200 human similarity judgments and a newly collected data set of 390,819 human generalization judgments (N = 2,406 U.S. participants) across three sets of natural images. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Generalization, Psychological , Intelligence , Humans , Judgment
3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 128(24): 241602, 2022 Jun 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35776446

ABSTRACT

We study the relation between approximate horizon symmetries of AdS black branes and approximately conserved currents in their dual hydrodynamic description. We argue that the existence of an approximately conserved enstrophy current unique to 2+1 dimensional fluid flow implies that AdS_{4} black branes possess a special class of approximate supertranslations (which we identify).

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