会议专题

Quantitative Estimation for Effects of Tonality, Speed, and Register on the Cheerfulness of Music

It has been shown that emotion, including musical emotion, is most simply illustrated by a two-dimensional model spanned by valence and arousal level. This model also suggest that the same space is spanned by cheerfulness and tension dimensions. It is known that tonality, speed, and register affect the cheerfulness of music. However, it has not been quantitatively defined how these factors determine cheerfulness. In the present study, three experiments were conducted to determine how the tonality (major or minor), speed, and performed register vary the cheerfulness. In the first experiment, four (ascending and descending major, ascending and descending minor) scales and two short melodies were used as stimuli. In the second experiment, ascending major scales performed in different registers were used. In the last experiment, ascending major scales performed in various speeds were used. In each experiment, listeners compared and rated the cheerfulness in each pair of stimuli. The results of multidimensional scaling showed that different cheerfulness scales constructed by each factor can be combined into a single onedimensional scale. In the present study, performed register was evaluated as the centroid for the overall-term spectrum, and was shown in ERB-rate scale. The results showed that the degree of cheerfulness increased proportionally as the register shown in ERB-rate increased. It is estimated that the effect of tonality corresponds to the centroid shift of 4 ERB-rate, and doubling the speed corresponds to the increase of the controid in 3.5 ERBrate.

Kenta Shoji Masashi Yamada

Graduate School of Engineering,Kanazawa Institute of Technology,Japan Department of Media Informatics,Kanazawa Institute of Technology,Japan

国际会议

The 10th Western Pacific Acoustics Conference(第十届西太平洋声学会议WESPAC X)

北京

英文

1-6

2009-09-21(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)