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Musical Expectancy Definition of expectancy

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Presentation on theme: "Musical Expectancy Definition of expectancy"— Presentation transcript:

1 Musical Expectancy Definition of expectancy
“Expectancy” refers to the idea that an antecedent event, or set of events, implies or anticipates a subsequent event or set of events In music, this means that a given musical event or passage implies or anticipates an upcoming musical event or passage Impact of expectancy formation/realization Relation between expectancy formation and the apprehension of musical emotion and meaning Impact of expectancy formation on perceptual and cognitive processing of music

2 Musical Expectancy Basic expectation ?

3 Musical Expectancy Questions about the process of expectancy generation and realization The factors underlying the formation of musical expectations. What processes give rise to the formation of expectancies, and influence the content of these expectations The subsequent implications of expectancy realization on musical processing, including basic responses to music, guiding of attention, memory for music, and so on.

4 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
The Expectancy Region (Jones, 1976)

5 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
Gestalt principles Melodic processes (Meyer, 1973) Gap-Fill Pattern ┌───┐ ? Linear Pattern Expected Note:

6 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
The 1st eight measures of Schumann’s “Du Ring An Meinen Finger,” Op. 42 Schmuckler (1989)

7 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
Schmuckler (1989) Probe Position 1: Context: Trial 1: Continuation Tone Trial 2:

8 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
Schmuckler (1989) Probe Position 2:  Context: Possible Continuation Tones:

9 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
Schmuckler (1989) Beta weights for tonal structure, melodic contour, and melodic process

10 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
The Implication-Realization Model (Narmour, 1990, 1992) Registral Direction – small intervals imply melodic continuation in the same direction, whereas large intervals imply a reversal of direction Intervallic difference – small intervals imply similarly sized intervals whereas large intervals imply smaller intervals Registral Return – refers to cases in which the second tone of a realized interval reverse pitch direction, thus producing approximate symmetry in patterns Proximity – there is a general preference for small realized intervals Closure – closure occurs when a melody changes direction or when a relatively smaller realized interval follows a larger implicative interval

11 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
Quantification of Narmour’s Implication-Realization Model Schellenberg (1996)

12 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
Simplification of Narmour’s Implication-Realization Model Schellenberg (1997)

13 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
Harmonic expectancies Schmuckler (1989) Predictions based on Piston’s (1978) Table of Usual Root Progressions

14 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
Harmonic expectancies Schmuckler (1989) Comparisons of harmonic expectancy ratings

15 The Formation of Musical Expectancies
Combined (melodic and harmonic) expectancies Schmuckler (1989) Beta weights for melodic and harmonic factors

16 The Consequences of Musical Expectancies
The Harmonic Priming Paradigm Bharucha & Stoeckig (1986, 1987) Related Context: Unrelated Context:

17 The Consequences of Musical Expectancies
Processing of harmonically related and unrelated chords Bharucha & Stoeckig (1986)

18 The Consequences of Musical Expectancies
Harmonic context and phoneme monitoring Bigand, Tillman, Poulin, D’Adamo & Madurell (2001)

19 The Consequences of Musical Expectancies
Harmonic context and phoneme monitoring Bigand, Tillman, Poulin, D’Adamo & Madurell (2001)

20 The Consequences of Musical Expectancies
Expectancy and memory Schmuckler (1997)


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