Musical memory + pitch difference tests

25
Here's another thing I don't get. The hz difference only measures the deviation from the fixed first tone, right? That is, don't go around telling people that you can, in fact, reliable tell the difference between tones .375 hz apart. This should be much easier to do at 50hz than at 15,500hz.

Am I understanding this right?

= Justin

PS - I'll post this on the comments board of the game and see if I get and answer.

Musical memory + pitch difference tests

26
Justin from Queens wrote:Here's another thing I don't get. The hz difference only measures the deviation from the fixed first tone, right? That is, don't go around telling people that you can, in fact, reliable tell the difference between tones .375 hz apart. This should be much easier to do at 50hz than at 15,500hz.

Am I understanding this right?

= Justin

PS - I'll post this on the comments board of the game and see if I get and answer.


I think this depends on a set of variables. Amongst those variables are probably such items as:

1. overall amplitude. Fletcher-Munson curves, anyone?

2. hearing damage. I have a dead ear on the right to anything over 18khz or so. I used to hear OVER 20khz, I think. According to the old test at the St. Louis science center, anyway...

3. practice. Critical listening skills get better with practice. That 'Golden Ears' training thing works wonders. You lose it if you don't use it, though...

4. fatigue. As in hearing fatigue.


As an aside, something I found interesting was that your brain can hear and decipher phonemes ('language sounds', for the uninitiated) much faster than it can interpret musical events. If someone is talking very fast, and they are speaking your language, you can process the sounds much faster than you can tell a musical passage sped up to the same number of sounds, which at a certain threshold gets interpreted as noise...although I'd like to see comparative stats on musicians vrs. non-musicians on that threshold...

Musical memory + pitch difference tests

28
scott wrote:91.7% correct on the musical memory... 0.675 on the pitch identification.


Just took it again...

83.3% on the musical memory

1.0875 on pitch.

I'm gonna call that worse by about 3dBcrap.

That was with headphones.


For any super-noobz out there, dBcrap and dBC are not the same thing
Last edited by scott_Archive on Thu Nov 30, 2006 11:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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