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      Perception of musical tension in short chord sequences: the influence of harmonic function, sensory dissonance, horizontal motion, and musical training.

      Perception & psychophysics
      Auditory Perception, Cognition, Female, Humans, Male, Music, Pitch Perception, Psychoacoustics

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          Abstract

          This study investigates the effect of four variables (tonal hierarchies, sensory chordal consonance, horizontal motion, and musical training) on perceived musical tension. Participants were asked to evaluate the tension created by a chord X in sequences of three chords [C major-->X-->C major] in a C major context key. The X chords could be major or minor triads major-minor seventh, or minor seventh chords built on the 12 notes of the chromatic scale. The data were compared with Krumhansl's (1990) harmonic hierarchy and with predictions of Lerdahl's (1988) cognitive theory, Hutchinson and Knopoff's (1978) and Parncutt's (1989) sensory-psychoacoustical theories, and the model of horizontal motion defined in the paper. As a main outcome, it appears that judgments of tension arose from a convergence of several cognitive and psychoacoustics influences, whose relative importance varies, depending on musical training.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          8668513
          10.3758/BF03205482

          Chemistry
          Auditory Perception,Cognition,Female,Humans,Male,Music,Pitch Perception,Psychoacoustics
          Chemistry
          Auditory Perception, Cognition, Female, Humans, Male, Music, Pitch Perception, Psychoacoustics

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