Affiliation:
1. P. O. Box 95, Hulls Cove, ME 04644-0095; e-mail: shandel@utk.edu
Abstract
Timbre is typically investigated as a perceptual attribute that differentiates instruments at one pitch. Yet the perceptual usefulness of timbre is that it allows listeners to recognize one instrument at different pitches. Using stimuli produced across the playing range by three wind instruments from two categories, woodwind and brass, we measured listeners' judgments of instrumental timbre across pitch in a dissimilarity task and measured listeners' ability to identify stimuli as being produced by the same or different instrument in a three-note oddball task. The resulting multidimensional scaling representation showed that Dimension 1 correlated with pitch, whereas Dimension 2 correlated with spectral centroid and separated the instrumental stimuli into the categories woodwind and brass. For three-note sequences, the task was extremely difficult for the woodwind pair, with listeners typically choosing the most dissimilarly pitched stimulus as coming from the oddball source. In contrast, the three-note sequences were easy for the woodwind-brass pairs. The results from these experiments illustrate the difficulty of extrapolating the timbre of a sound source across large differences in pitch.
Publisher
University of California Press
Cited by
22 articles.
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1. The Nature of Timbre;Ergo an Open Access Journal of Philosophy;2023-11-17
2. Timbral cues for learning to generalize musical instrument identity across pitch register;The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America;2023-02-01
3. Timbre Perception;Current Research in Systematic Musicology;2023
4. CRITERIA AND INDICATORS OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF MUSICIAN’S TIMBRE HEARING;SOCIETY. INTEGRATION. EDUCATION. Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference;2021-05-28
5. Multidimensional Timbre Spaces of Cochlear Implant Vocoded and Non-vocoded Synthetic Female Singing Voices;Frontiers in Neuroscience;2020-04-07