WHAT'S BEHIND OUR MUSIC TASTES, SOME COMMON PERCEPTIONS
Metal heads, jazz
purists and folkies may have more in common musically than you imagined. A new
study sheds light on the shared ways in which humans perceive music.
What do we really hear
when we listen to music? Researchers from Sweden's KTH Royal Institute of
Technology have attempted to close in on the answer by boiling our perception
of music down to nine basic elements -- or what they call "perceptual
features."
Their findings could
help improve computational models that the music industry uses for predicting
the individual tastes of listeners.
So-called music
information retrieval (MIR) models combine audio signal processing measurements
with analysis of musical elements, which are usually drawn from concepts of
music theory and music perception, such as beat strength, rhythmic regularity,
meter and mode. The models also include analysis of musical genre (for example,
punk, dance, experimental), emotion (sad, happy, tender) and other contextual
qualities.
But a big limitation
arises from how consistently music is perceived by listeners with different
backgrounds and varying familiarity with music, not to mention their individual
biases and cultural references.
The reliance on music
theory could be one of the weaknesses in the ability of MIR programs to capture
any commonalities in perception. Not everyone understands music, yet they know
what they like. So what is the basis on which these preferences are formed?
The researchers at KTH
-- Anders Friberg, Anton Hedblad, Marco Fabiani and Anders Elowsson -- argued
that when people listen to music, their brains may rely on an
"intermediate analysis layer" where more basic features of the music
are naturally perceived.
Getting a group of
people to agree on anything having to do with music is -- as any dj can attest
-- not easily done. But by focusing on nine key features of music, the team was
able to find some commonalities in perception that could prove useful.
They conducted an
experiment in which 20 people listened to 100 ringtones and 110 snippets of
film music and then rated what they heard in terms of each of the nine
so-called "perceptual features":
·
Speed -- slow or fast
·
Rhythmic clarity -- a
pulse that's firm or flowing
·
Rhythmic complexity --
simple patterns or more complex ones
·
Articulation -- the
duration of tones, staccato or legato
·
Dynamics -- relates to
the estimated effort of the players
·
Modality -- major or
minor key
·
Overall pitch --
overall pitch height of the music, high or low
·
Harmonic complexity --
the progression of harmonics
·
Brightness -- dark or
light
Friberg says the nine
perceptual features reflect how non-musicians try to understand what they are
hearing. For example, instead of rating tempo, which refers to the amount of
notes in a given time measure, they chose to use the less complicated concept
of speed -- which non-musicians associate with movement.
The idea was to see
whether the ratings they got from the subjects matched up in any significant
way.
The subjects used a
Likert scale to evaluate each feature, scoring the music for example somewhere
between slow and fast, or soft and loud.
"If there was a
high agreement among any of them, this would then indicate that a given feature
corresponds to something relating more closely to the real music perception
going on in our brains," he says.
Friberg says that for
the most part, the nine features did generate common agreement among the
participants.
"The nine
perceptual features work, and the test subjects' own references and cultural
differences do not matter.
"We could take 20
new volunteers, and the result would be the same," he says.
While Friberg says the
study is by no means the final word on music information retrieval, it does
offer a path toward a better understanding of human perception, which could
result in better and simpler computational models.
"A common
description in terms of different features would then be able to describe some
aspects of the music that most listeners have in common," he says.
"Thus, we avoid the huge individual differences in preferred music, what
is considered good or bad."
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