PERCEPTION OF MUSIC & LANGUAGE

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

PERCEPTION OF MUSIC & LANGUAGE. Music Perception. Musical notes Sounds of music extend across frequency range: 25 – 4200 Hz To increase by one octave double the frequency Intervals that sound good together have overlapping harmonic frequencies. Music Perception. Music Perception. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

PERCEPTION OF MUSIC & LANGUAGE

Anthony J Greene 2

Music Perception

• Musical notes– Sounds of music extend across frequency

range: 25–4200 Hz

– To increase by one octave double the frequency– Intervals that sound good together have

overlapping harmonic frequencies

Anthony J Greene 3

Music Perception

Anthony J Greene 4

Music Perception

•Tone height: A sound quality whereby a sound is heard to be of higher or lower pitch; monotonically related to frequency

•Tone chroma: A sound quality shared by tones that have the same octave interval•Musical helix: Can help visualize musical pitch

Anthony J Greene 5

Music Perception

• Rhythm: Not just in music– Lots of activities have rhythm: Walking,

waving, finger tapping, heartbeat, breathing, etc.

– More examples: Car, train rides

Anthony J Greene 6

Speech Perception

1. Cortical Areas For Speech Perception and Production

2. Phonemes• Articulation • Forment transitions

3. Speech Segmentation4. Intonation & Prosidy

Anthony J Greene 7

Broca’s Area & Wernicke’s Area

Anthony J Greene 8

Aphasia• Broca's aphasics produce slow, halting speech that is rarely

grammatical. They generally retain their vocabularies and have no difficulty naming objects or performing other meaning-related tasks. In general, they can deduce the meanings of sentences from general knowledge, but cannot understand sentences whose syntax is essential to their meaning.

• Wernicke's aphasics are able to produce generally grammatical sentences, but they are often nonsensical and include invented words. Wernicke's aphasics show few signs of understanding others' speech, and have difficulty naming objects.

Anthony J Greene 9

Phonemes - The auditory components of speech

• 43 Phonemes • An alphabet for spoken language -- non-

decomposable• All sounds English words can be built from

a combination of phonemes

Anthony J Greene 10

Articulation: Consonants

1 Place of articulation:– Lips: b, p, m– Alveolar ridge: d, t, n– Soft palate: g, k, ng

Anthony J Greene 11

Articulation: Consonants

2 Manner of Articulation:– Totally obstructed: b, p, d, t, g, k– Partially obstructed: s, z, f, v, th, sh– Slightly obstructed: l, r, w, y– Initially obstructed: ch, j– Nasals: n, m, ng

Anthony J Greene 12

Articulation: Consonants

3 Voicing:– Voiced: b, m ,z, l, r– Voiceless: p, s, ch

Anthony J Greene 13

Articulation: VowelsFront Vowels Central Vowelsbeet aboutbit butbaitbet Diphthongsat bite

boyBack Vowels boughbootbookboatcausecot

Anthony J Greene 14

Recognizing Phonemes

1 Place ofarticulation:

Front Middle Back

Anthony J Greene 15

Recognizing Phonemes

2 Manner ofarticulation:

Obstructed

Unobstructed

Anthony J Greene 16

Recognizing Phonemes

3 Voicing:

Anthony J Greene 17

Recognizing Phonemes

Vowels

Anthony J Greene 18

Recognizing Phonemes

Vowels

Anthony J Greene 19

Speech Segmentation• The problem of determining which phonemes are

to be grouped into words before you know what has been said

Anthony J Greene 20

Anthony J Greene 21

Speech Segmentation

• Appears to be largely a function of context, learning common phoneme groupings, common segmentations and familiar phrases

Anthony J Greene 22

Speech Segmentation

• Appears to be largely a function of context, learning common phoneme groupings, common segmentations and familiar phrases

• "I owe you a yo-yo". "Mares eat oats and does eat oats, and little lambs eat ivy, a kid'll eat ivy too, wouldn't you?"

Anthony J Greene 23

Spectrogram: I owe you a yo-yo

Anthony J Greene 24

Speech Segmentation (cont.)

• When speaking with someone who doesn't understand what you just said, or with a young child, we tend to put audible spaces between words in order to assist segmentation

• Many errors of speech perception occur because of improper segmentation - " 'scuse me while I kiss the sky" - or with one phoneme shift -" 'scuse me while I kiss this guy".

Anthony J Greene 25

Intonation & Prosidy

• Meaning is carried in intonation "Oh yeah, that course is Great" or "That's it, you're finished”

• Prosidy is not only distinct behaviorally, but neuropsychologically as well

Anthony J Greene 26

Language Acquisition

Discernable speech sounds require reinforcement:Retroflex Consonant

Anthony J Greene 27

Language AcquisitionUniversal Grammar Associative Learning

Nativism Empiricism

Noam Chomsky B.F. Skinner

Experience isinsufficient

Experience is sufficient

Anthony J Greene 28

Universal Grammar

• Critical Period• Human Specific Behavior• The structure of syntax: The case for

generative grammar• Insufficiency of Experience• Creoles & ASL

Anthony J Greene 29

Associative Learning and Language

• While language is a remarkable capacity, a predilection for language acquisition does not imply a “universal grammar”

• Purely associative neural network models can learn language and do so remarkably similarly to humans

Anthony J Greene 30

Resolution of The Debate

• Ethology: The Ecological Perspective for Learning: Conrad Lorenz

• Prepared and Unprepared Learning• Nativism Vs. Empiricism Redux: Language

acquisition, as with other learning is associative (empiricism),but occurs within systems adapted for certain types of acquisition (nativism)