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  4. The pleasantness of sensory dissonance is mediated by musical style and expertise
 
research article

The pleasantness of sensory dissonance is mediated by musical style and expertise

Popescu, Tudor
•
Neuser, Monja P.
•
Neuwirth, Markus  
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January 31, 2019
Scientific Reports

Western musical styles use a large variety of chords and vertical sonorities. Based on objective acoustical properties, chords can be situated on a dissonant-consonant continuum. While this might to some extent converge with the unpleasant-pleasant continuum, subjective liking might diverge for various chord forms from music across different styles. Our study aimed to investigate how well appraisals of the roughness and pleasantness dimensions of isolated chords taken from real-world music are predicted by Parncutt's established model of sensory dissonance. Furthermore, we related these subjective ratings to style of origin and acoustical features of the chords as well as musical sophistication of the raters. Ratings were obtained for chords deemed representative of the harmonic language of three different musical styles (classical, jazz and avant-garde music), plus randomly generated chords. Results indicate that pleasantness and roughness ratings were, on average, mirror opposites; however, their relative distribution differed greatly across styles, reflecting different underlying aesthetic ideals. Parncutt's model only weakly predicted ratings for all but Classical chords, suggesting that listeners' appraisal of the dissonance and pleasantness of chords bears not only on stimulus-side but also on listener-side factors. Indeed, we found that levels of musical sophistication negatively predicted listeners' tendency to rate the consonance and pleasantness of any one chord as coupled measures, suggesting that musical education and expertise may serve to individuate how these musical dimensions are apprehended.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41598-018-35873-8
Web of Science ID

WOS:000457287000058

Author(s)
Popescu, Tudor
Neuser, Monja P.
Neuwirth, Markus  
Bravo, Fernando
Mende, Wolfgang
Boneh, Oren
Moss, Fabian C.  
Rohrmeier, Martin  
Date Issued

2019-01-31

Publisher

Nature Research

Published in
Scientific Reports
Volume

9

Article Number

1070

Subjects

Multidisciplinary Sciences

•

Science & Technology - Other Topics

•

consonance

•

perception

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preference

•

pitch

•

musicians

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
DCML  
Available on Infoscience
June 19, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/158270
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