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Sensorimotor Synchronization with Higher Metrical Levels in Music Shortens Perceived Time

David Hammerschmidt, Clemens Wöllner

2020Music Perception An Interdisciplinary Journal32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The aim of the present study was to investigate if the perception of time is affected by actively attending to different metrical levels in musical rhythmic patterns. In an experiment with a repeated-measures design, musicians and non-musicians were presented with musical rhythmic patterns played at three different tempi. They synchronised with multiple metrical levels (half notes, quarter notes, eighth notes) of these patterns using a finger-tapping paradigm and listened without tapping. After each trial, stimulus duration was judged using a verbal estimation paradigm. Results show that the metrical level participants synchronised with influenced perceived time: actively attending to a higher metrical level (half notes, longer inter-tap intervals) led to the shortest time estimations, hence time was experienced as passing more quickly. Listening without tapping led to the longest time estimations. The faster the tempo of the patterns, the longer the time estimation. While there were no differences between musicians and non-musicians, those participants who tapped more consistently and accurately (as analysed by circular statistics) estimated durations to be shorter. Thus, attending to different metrical levels in music, by deliberately directing attention and motor activity, affects time perception.

Topics & Concepts

TappingRhythmTime perceptionActive listeningPsychologyFinger tappingPerceptionMusicalStimulus (psychology)Music perceptionDuration (music)AudiologySpeech recognitionCognitive psychologyCommunicationComputer scienceArtAcousticsVisual artsLiteratureAestheticsPhysicsMedicineNeuroscienceNeuroscience and Music PerceptionDiverse Music Education InsightsHearing Loss and Rehabilitation