Seeing what you hear: Visual feedback improves pitch recognition

M. Eldridge, E. Saltzman, A. Lahav
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引用次数: 15

Abstract

The present study examined the effect of visual feedback on the ability to recognise and consolidate pitch information. We trained two groups of nonmusicians to play a piano piece by ear, having one group receiving uninterrupted audiovisual feedback, while allowing the other only to hear, but not see their hand on the keyboard. Results indicate that subjects for whom visual information was deprived showed significantly poorer ability to recognise pitches from the musical piece they had learned. These results are interesting since pitch recognition ability would not intuitively seem to rely on visual feedback. In addition, we show that subjects with previous experience in computer touch-typing made fewer errors during training when trained with no visual feedback, but did not show improved pitch recognition ability posttraining. Our results demonstrate how sensory redundancy increases robustness of learning, and further encourage the use of audiovisual training procedures for facilitating the learning of new skills.
看到你听到的:视觉反馈提高音调识别
本研究考察了视觉反馈对识别和巩固音高信息能力的影响。我们训练两组不听音乐的人用耳朵弹奏一段钢琴曲,其中一组接受不间断的视听反馈,而另一组只能听到,但看不到他们的手在键盘上。结果表明,视觉信息被剥夺的受试者识别所学音乐音高的能力明显较差。这些结果很有趣,因为从直觉上看,音高识别能力似乎并不依赖于视觉反馈。此外,我们发现具有计算机触摸打字经验的受试者在没有视觉反馈的训练中出错较少,但训练后的音高识别能力并没有提高。我们的研究结果证明了感觉冗余如何增加学习的鲁棒性,并进一步鼓励使用视听训练程序来促进新技能的学习。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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