1 / 1

Tonal Violations Interact with Lexical Processing: Evidence from Cross-modal Priming

Tonal Violations Interact with Lexical Processing: Evidence from Cross-modal Priming Meagan E. Curtis 1 and Jamshed J. Bharucha 2 1 Dept. of Psych. & Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, 2 Tufts University, Boston, Massachusetts. INTRODUCTION. RESULTS.

Download Presentation

Tonal Violations Interact with Lexical Processing: Evidence from Cross-modal Priming

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tonal Violations Interact with Lexical Processing: Evidence from Cross-modal Priming Meagan E. Curtis1 and Jamshed J. Bharucha2 1Dept. of Psych. & Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, 2Tufts University, Boston, Massachusetts INTRODUCTION RESULTS EXPERIMENT 1: METHODS Subjects Twenty-four volunteers from the Dartmouth community Behavioral task Decide as quickly and accurately as possible whether the visual stimulus is a word or a nonword Some aspects of a stimulus are processed in a multi-modal manner and can be informative across modalities. For instance, a sound emanating from a specific location will draw attention to that location and allow for faster processing of visual and haptic information coming from that direction. Our investigations examine whether specific aspects of music are processed in a multi-modal manner, allowing for cross-modal priming between the auditory and visual systems. Follow Up In experiment 1, participants were not required to attend to the auditory stimuli. They were instructed to concentrate on the visual task. In experiment 2, participants were required to attend to the auditory stimuli. They were asked to perform a chord discrimination task after the word discrimination task. We anticipated that the chord discriminations would be influenced by the visual stimuli, just as the word discriminations were influenced by the auditory stimuli in experiment 1. 1 2 5 3 4 7 pagic Trial + MUSICAL EXPECTANCY Target Chord F(1,9)=5.9, p=.04 The goal of our investigations was to determine whether musical expectancy violations can be informative across modalities, alerting the perceptual systems to anticipate other low probability stimuli. Expectancy can be easily modulated using musical stimuli.Once a tonal context has been established, listeners expect subsequent chords and notes to adhere to the established tonality. If tonality is violated, an expectancy violation occurs. EXPERIMENT 2: METHODS Word/ Nonword Target chord (1000 ms) Subjects Ten volunteers from the Dartmouth Community Participation Criterion All subjects were given a chord discrimination pretest. Only those who could perform the task significantly above the level of chance could participate. Behavioral tasks Decide as quickly and accurately as possible whether the visual stimulus is a word or a nonword. Then decide whether the context chord and the target chord are related or unrelated. Fixation Context chord (3000 ms) Random tones (500 ms) Time RESULTS STIMULI Target Chord F(1,9)=6.5, p=.03 Participants heard chord progressions in which the target chord either adhered to or violated the established tonality. A visual discrimination task was presented simultaneously with the target chord. The visual stimuli consisted of familiar and novel stimuli: words and nonwords. The results of experiment 1 were replicated. Additionally, the error rates to the chord discrimination task reveal a similar effect; words influenced participants to judge chords as being related, whereas nonwords influenced them to judge chords as being unrelated. chord? Trial Context Target Chord Chord Target Chord F(1,23)=5.1, p=.03 Related/ Unrelated (Displayed until response occurs) narse CONCLUSIONS Participants were faster to identify familiar visual stimuli (words)when they were presented with the expected target chord than when the chord was unexpected. However, participants were faster to identify novel visual stimuli (nonwords) when they were presented with the unexpected target chord than when the chord was expected. Expected Target Organ Musical expectancy and lexical familiarity appear to be processed in a multi-modal manner. Low probability stimuli can be informative across modalities, alerting the perceptual systems to prepare for other low probability stimuli, whereas high probability stimuli alert the perceptual systems to anticipate other high probability stimuli. + Word/ Nonword Target chord (1000 ms maximum) C G # Fixation Context chord (3000 ms) Time # Unexpected Target Organ # Random tones (500 ms) # C F# Note: The same stimuli were used in experiments 1 and 2

More Related