1. In the case of a power chord played on the open A string, not only are the fretted notes A (110 Hz) and E (165 Hz) produced, but also the difference frequency of these notes (165–110 Hz), which is an octave (55 Hz) below the fretted fundamental note of the chord (Walser, 1993, p. 43).
2. The equalization settings of the amplifier were all neutral (= 5), as was the Presence setting. Resonance was deactivated. Gain for the clean tone was at 3 with the Drive option deactivated. The overdriven tone had the same setting as the clean tone with the Drive increased to 7. To create the distorted tone, Drive was activated and set to 4.
3. The preference for rock music was split into two groups to be able to compare rock fans with participants who do not like this genre. Furthermore, the data format of the two experiments did not allow direct correlations but required data to be processed and entered into a third project, making it impossible to keep interval-scaled, person-related data.
4. Arnal, L.H., Flinker, A., Kleinschmidt, A., Giraud, A.-L., & Poeppel, D. (2015). Human screams occupy a privileged niche in the communication soundscape. Current Biology, 25, 2051–2056.
5. Aures, W. (1985). Der sensorische Wohlklang als Funktion psychoakustischer Empfindungsgrößen. Acustica, 58, 282–290.