Exploring the perception of expressivity and interaction within musical dyads
Authors
Date
2016Bodily gestures in music performance play an important role in the perception and appreciation of music by the audience. Performance variations can be identified by observers even when no auditory cues are available; visual kinematic information has been demonstrated to be crucial in identifying expressive intentions. The current thesis explores violin dyads performing an unfamiliar song. High quality optical motion capture was employed to record full body movement. We applied the standard paradigm to study the perception of expressive performance. Our aim was to predict perceptual ratings of expressivity from movement computations. That is, to deduce secondary aspects of musical gestures, namely intentions, from primary aspects, namely physical movement. Our hypotheses were that perceived expressivity is dominated by vision and that ancillary gestures carry significant cues for observers. For this purpose, a web-based perceptual experiment was conducted using short duration stimuli that were rendered as point light representations. Sound and vision, vision only, and sound only stimuli were employed to explore interactions across different modalities. Preliminary movement analysis showed that the musicians performed with greater amounts of kinetic energy in the more exaggerated expressive conditions. We extracted low level kinematic features based on instantaneous velocities of the markers of interest. We applied principal component analysis on the motion capture timeseries data, and we performed multiple linear regression and linear discriminant analysis to assess our hypotheses. We extend previous findings about visual perception in dyadic context, and we provide an account of idiosyncratic movements in violin performance.
...
Keywords
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- Pro gradu -tutkielmat [29561]
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Performers' emotions in expressive performance : sound, movement, and perception
Van Zijl, Anemone G. W. (University of Jyväskylä, 2014) -
Playing with feeling : the influence of felt and perceived emotions on movement features in piano performances
Czepiel, Anna (2019)This thesis studied the influence of - and combinations of - felt and perceived emotion on performer movement. Pianists played a piece with which they had an emotional connection in the following conditions: Technical ... -
Expressive gestures in piano performance
Thompson, Marc (2007) -
Motion in musical sound : the role of music performer bodily gesture in creating expressive sounding music
Allingham, Emma (2018)The way that musicians move when they perform is closely linked with their communicative intent and artistic interpretation of the music. While research has shown that musicians’ bodily gesture conveys visually expressive ... -
Creating a musically expressive performance : a study of vocalists' use of emotions in performance preparation
Condon, Shawn Michael (2015)Musicians and educators understand the importance of expressivity in vocal performance. Despite the acceptance of expressivity as a crucial element in musical performance, educators have reported addressing it only cursorily ...