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Music reading expertise affects visual change detection: Evidence from a music-related flicker paradigm

Heather Sheridan, Abigail L. Kleinsmith

2021Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology10 citationsDOI

Abstract

To study the mechanisms and boundary conditions of expertise effects on change detection, we introduced a novel music-related variant of the flicker paradigm. Specifically, we monitored the eye movements of expert musicians (with 10 years of music experience) and non-musicians (who could not read music) while they located changes across two rapidly alternating versions of a music score, with a blank screen presented between each screen change. Relative to the non-musicians, experts were faster at change detection, with shorter fixations and larger saccade amplitudes. Expertise effects on accuracy and saccade amplitude were magnified for visually complex relative to simple music scores. Consistent with the assumptions of chunking and template theories of expertise, our results suggest that expert musicians can use chunking (i.e., perceptual grouping) mechanisms to facilitate perceptual encoding during change detection.

Topics & Concepts

Chunking (psychology)PerceptionCognitive psychologyPsychologyChange detectionFlickerPerceptual learningComputer scienceSpeech recognitionCommunicationArtificial intelligenceNeuroscienceOperating systemVisual perception and processing mechanismsNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesFace Recognition and Perception
Music reading expertise affects visual change detection: Evidence from a music-related flicker paradigm | Litcius