* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Jennifer Lancaster
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
An Investigation Into the Nature of Absolute Pitch By Jennifer Lancaster Relative Pitch • Music has a key and tonal center For instance: C major C-D-E-F-G-A-B-C • The tonic of this scale is C • When this scale is played or a tone from it is given as a reference, people with RP can identify pitches from it • This identification is done through interval recognition • Intervals are the distances between each of the pitches (see next slide) • Music students are trained in this Intervals Absolute Pitch • Needs no reference • Remember not to tones to identify and confuse this with wellrecall pitches developed RP or vocal • Automatic tension pitch • Most people are told • No one really knows that this is unattainable where this ability • Most people are taught comes from about disadvantages in • Four basic theories having AP Absolute Pitch Theories • Heredity- inherited through genetics • Imprinting-learned only through a critical period during childhood • Learning-anyone can learn at any time • Unlearning-all born with potential, but its “taught” out of us Sample Survey Questions 1. Do you have a memory for all 12 pitches? 2. Are you confident in your ability to identify them immediately? 3. How has your case of absolute pitch been confirmed or documented? 4. What happens in your mind as you recognize a pitch? 5. Does it take more thinking to place the pitch in its correct octave? (questions continued) 6. Do you associate pitch with colors? 7. Are the colors consistent every time? 8. Do the different timbres of instruments throw you off? 9. What are the advantages and disadvantages of having absolute pitch? 10. Did you have a piano or keyboard instrument in your home as a child? Did you play it? (questions continued) 11. Are there any other people in your family that claim to have absolute pitch? 12. Do you believe your ability comes from a memory for different pitch heights/levels, or from some other quality in pitches that helps you differentiate between them? David Burge’s Color Hearing Approach • Color hearing does not have anything to do with synethesia (a rare phenomenon in which people hear music and see colors) • Coloring hearing program does not train through flashing colors in front of subjects’ eyes Burge suggests that there is another element to absolute pitch, beyond the “normal” way pitches are identified (tone height) Color Hearing Program • Hearing the “deep characteristics” of each individual pitch • Some identify F# as twangy or Eb as mellow • This program was implemented in an Ohio study that yielded positive results • First exercise has subjects play chromatic scale and listening for characteristics of each pitch and draw a “color” diagram – This is to cross relate the senses of sight and sound As a child, we were taught to identify colors. The majority of us know that this is red & this is blue. Why don’t we learn to identify pitches? With Burge’s program, one learns to identify pitches as one might learn to identify colors. Challenges In Dealing With AP In This Experiment • Eliminating RP cues – We will use pitches that are all the same distance apart from each other – Distractions between test items • Motivation – Possible incentives – Useful skill Our Experiment • Small scale (6-10 subjects) • Learn 6 pitches • Training run for 2 months • Pretest and Posttest • Deep listening activities • Describing pitches • Drills on pitches • 20 minutes per day • Subjects have partners