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Listeners Lengthen Phrase Boundaries in Self-Paced...
Journal article

Listeners Lengthen Phrase Boundaries in Self-Paced Music

Abstract

Previous work has shown that musicians tend to slow down as they approach phrase boundaries (phrase-final lengthening). In the present experiments, we used a paradigm from the action perception literature, the dwell time paradigm (Hard, Recchia, & Tversky, 2011), to investigate whether participants engage in phrase boundary lengthening when self-pacing through musical sequences. When participants used a key press to produce each successive chord of Bach chorales, they dwelled longer on boundary chords than nonboundary chords in both the original chorales and atonal manipulations of the chorales. When a novel musical sequence was composed that controlled for metrical and melodic contour cues to boundaries, the dwell time difference between boundaries and nonboundaries was greater in the tonal condition than in the atonal condition. Furthermore, similar results were found for a group of nonmusicians, suggesting that phrase-final lengthening in musical production is not dependent on musical training and can be evoked by harmonic cues.

Authors

Kragness HE; Trainor LJ

Journal

Journal of Experimental Psychology Human Perception & Performance, Vol. 42, No. 10, pp. 1676–1686

Publisher

American Psychological Association (APA)

Publication Date

October 1, 2016

DOI

10.1037/xhp0000245

ISSN

0096-1523

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