Determining the end of a musical turn: Effects of tonal cues

Successful duetting requires that musicians coordinate their performance with their partners. In the case of turn-taking in improvised performance they need to be able to predict their partner's turn-end in order to accurately time their own entries. Here we investigate the cues used for accura...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta psychologica 2018-01, Vol.182, p.189-193
Hauptverfasser: Hadley, Lauren V., Sturt, Patrick, Moran, Nikki, Pickering, Martin J.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Successful duetting requires that musicians coordinate their performance with their partners. In the case of turn-taking in improvised performance they need to be able to predict their partner's turn-end in order to accurately time their own entries. Here we investigate the cues used for accurate turn-end prediction in musical improvisations, focusing on the role of tonal structure. In a response-time task, participants more accurately determined the endings of (tonal) jazz than (non-tonal) free improvisation turns. Moreover, for the jazz improvisations, removing low frequency information (2100Hz) had no effect. Neither form of filtering affected response accuracy in the free improvisation condition. We therefore argue that tonal cues aided prediction accuracy for the jazz improvisations compared to the free improvisations. We compare our results with those from related speech research (De Ruiter et al., 2006), to draw comparisons between the structural function of tonality and linguistic syntax. •We investigated the cues listeners use to predict ends of musical improvisations.•People are more accurate at predicting jazz than free improvisations.•Removing low frequencies reduces accuracy for jazz but not free improvisations.•Tonal information conveyed in low frequencies aids prediction accuracy.
ISSN:0001-6918
1873-6297
DOI:10.1016/j.actpsy.2017.11.001