Journal article
Consonance and pitch
N McLachlan, D Marco, M Light, S Wilson
Journal of Experimental Psychology General | Published : 2013
DOI: 10.1037/a0030830
Abstract
To date, no consensus exists in the literature as to theories of consonance and dissonance. Experimental data collected over the last century have raised questions about the dominant theories that are based on frequency relationships between the harmonics of music chords. This study provides experimental evidence that strongly challenges these theories and suggests a new theory of dissonance based on relationships between pitch perception and recognition. Experiment 1 shows that dissonance does not increase with increasing numbers of harmonics in chords as predicted by Helmholtz's (1863/1954) roughness theory, nor does it increase with fewer pitch-matching errors as predicted by Stumpf's (18..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council