Synchronization to metrical levels in music depends on low-frequency spectral components and tempo
Burger, B., London, J., Thompson, M., & Toiviainen, P. (2018). Synchronization to metrical levels in music depends on low-frequency spectral components and tempo. Psychological Research, 82(6), 1195-1211. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00426-017-0894-2
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Psychological ResearchDate
2018Copyright
© Springer-Verlag GmbH, 2017
Previous studies have found relationships between music-induced movement and
musical characteristics on more general levels, such as tempo or pulse clarity. This
study focused on synchronization abilities to music of finely-varying tempi and
varying degrees of low frequency spectral change/flux. Excerpts from six classic
Motown/R&B songs at three different tempos (105, 115, and 130 BPM) were used as
stimuli in this experiment. Each was then time-stretched by a factor of 5% with
regards to the original tempo, yielding a total of 12 stimuli that were presented to 30
participants. Participants were asked to move along with the stimuli while being
recorded with an optical motion capture system. Synchronization analysis was
performed relative to the beat and the bar level of the music and four body parts.
Results suggest that participants synchronized different body parts to specific metrical
levels; in particular, vertical movements of hip and feet were synchronized to the beat
level when the music contained large amounts of low frequency spectral flux and had
a slower tempo, while synchronization of head and hands was more tightly coupled to
the weak flux stimuli at the bar level. Synchronization was generally more tightly
coupled to the slower versions of the same stimuli, while synchronization showed an
inverted u-shape effect at the bar level as tempo increased. These results indicate
complex relationships between musical characteristics, in particular regarding
metrical and temporal structure, and our ability to synchronize and entrain to such
musical stimuli.
...
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https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/27121799
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Research Council of FinlandFunding program(s)
Research post as Academy Professor, AoFAdditional information about funding
This research was supported by an Academy of Finland grant (project “Dynamics of Music Cognition,” project numbers 272250, 274037) to authors BB, MT, and PT, and by a Finnish Core Fulbright Scholar grant to author JL.License
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