Process timing and its relation to the coding of tonal harmony.
Elliott, Mark
Elliott, Mark
Loading...
Files
Loading...
Journal article
Adobe PDF, 433.31 KB
Publication Date
2010
Type
journal article
Downloads
Citation
Aksentijevic, A., Barber, P. J., & Elliott, M. A. (2010). Process timing and its relation to the coding of tonal harmony. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance (In press).
Abstract
Advances in auditory research suggest that gamma-band synchronization of frequency-specific cortical loci could be responsible for the integration of pure tones (harmonics) into harmonic complex tones. Thus far, evidence for such a mechanism has been revealed in neurophysiological studies, with little corroborative psychophysical evidence. In 6 experiments, we observed a rate- and time- specific response-time advantage for a sequence of target pips when the defining frequency of the target was a fractional multiple of a priming frequency. The effect was only observed when the prime and target tone-pip sequences were presented at 33 pips per second (pps) and when the inter-stimulus interval was approximately 100 and 250 milliseconds (ms). This evidence implicates oscillatory gamma-band activity in the representation of harmonic complex tones and suggests that synchronization with precise temporal characteristics is important for disambiguating related harmonic templates. An outline of a model is presented, which accounts for these findings in terms of fast resynchronization of relevant neuronal assemblies.
Funder
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Publisher DOI
Rights
CC BY-NC-ND