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The Science of Harmony: A Psychophysical Basis for Perceptual Tensions and Resolutions in Music

This paper attempts to establish a psychophysical basis for both stationary (tension in chord sonorities) and transitional (resolution in chord progressions) harmony. Harmony studies the phenomenon of combining notes in music to produce a pleasing effect greater than the sum of its parts. Being both...

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Autores principales: Chan, Paul Yaozhu, Dong, Minghui, Li, Haizhou
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AAAS 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7006947/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32043080
http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/2019/2369041
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author Chan, Paul Yaozhu
Dong, Minghui
Li, Haizhou
author_facet Chan, Paul Yaozhu
Dong, Minghui
Li, Haizhou
author_sort Chan, Paul Yaozhu
collection PubMed
description This paper attempts to establish a psychophysical basis for both stationary (tension in chord sonorities) and transitional (resolution in chord progressions) harmony. Harmony studies the phenomenon of combining notes in music to produce a pleasing effect greater than the sum of its parts. Being both aesthetic and mathematical in nature, it has baffled some of the brightest minds in physics and mathematics for centuries. With stationary harmony acoustics, traditional theories explaining consonances and dissonances that have been widely accepted are centred around two schools: rational relationships (commonly credited to Pythagoras) and Helmholtz's beating frequencies. The first is more of an attribution than a psychoacoustic explanation while electrophysiological (amongst other) discrepancies with the second still remain disputed. Transitional harmony, on the other hand, is a more complex problem that has remained largely elusive to acoustic science even today. In order to address both stationary and transitional harmony, we first propose the notion of interharmonic and subharmonic modulations to address the summation of adjacent and distant sinusoids in a chord. Based on this, earlier parts of this paper then bridges the two schools and shows how they stem from a single equation. Later parts of the paper focuses on subharmonic modulations to explain aspects of harmony that interharmonic modulations cannot. Introducing the concept of stationary and transitional subharmonic tensions, we show how it can explain perceptual concepts such as tension in stationary harmony and resolution in transitional harmony, by which we also address the five fundamental questions of psychoacoustic harmony such as why the pleasing effect of harmony is greater than that of the sum of its parts. Finally, strong correlations with traditional music theory and perception statistics affirm our theory with stationary and transitional harmony.
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spelling pubmed-70069472020-02-10 The Science of Harmony: A Psychophysical Basis for Perceptual Tensions and Resolutions in Music Chan, Paul Yaozhu Dong, Minghui Li, Haizhou Research (Wash D C) Research Article This paper attempts to establish a psychophysical basis for both stationary (tension in chord sonorities) and transitional (resolution in chord progressions) harmony. Harmony studies the phenomenon of combining notes in music to produce a pleasing effect greater than the sum of its parts. Being both aesthetic and mathematical in nature, it has baffled some of the brightest minds in physics and mathematics for centuries. With stationary harmony acoustics, traditional theories explaining consonances and dissonances that have been widely accepted are centred around two schools: rational relationships (commonly credited to Pythagoras) and Helmholtz's beating frequencies. The first is more of an attribution than a psychoacoustic explanation while electrophysiological (amongst other) discrepancies with the second still remain disputed. Transitional harmony, on the other hand, is a more complex problem that has remained largely elusive to acoustic science even today. In order to address both stationary and transitional harmony, we first propose the notion of interharmonic and subharmonic modulations to address the summation of adjacent and distant sinusoids in a chord. Based on this, earlier parts of this paper then bridges the two schools and shows how they stem from a single equation. Later parts of the paper focuses on subharmonic modulations to explain aspects of harmony that interharmonic modulations cannot. Introducing the concept of stationary and transitional subharmonic tensions, we show how it can explain perceptual concepts such as tension in stationary harmony and resolution in transitional harmony, by which we also address the five fundamental questions of psychoacoustic harmony such as why the pleasing effect of harmony is greater than that of the sum of its parts. Finally, strong correlations with traditional music theory and perception statistics affirm our theory with stationary and transitional harmony. AAAS 2019-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7006947/ /pubmed/32043080 http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/2019/2369041 Text en Copyright © 2019 Paul Yaozhu Chan et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Exclusive licensee Science and Technology Review Publishing House. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0).
spellingShingle Research Article
Chan, Paul Yaozhu
Dong, Minghui
Li, Haizhou
The Science of Harmony: A Psychophysical Basis for Perceptual Tensions and Resolutions in Music
title The Science of Harmony: A Psychophysical Basis for Perceptual Tensions and Resolutions in Music
title_full The Science of Harmony: A Psychophysical Basis for Perceptual Tensions and Resolutions in Music
title_fullStr The Science of Harmony: A Psychophysical Basis for Perceptual Tensions and Resolutions in Music
title_full_unstemmed The Science of Harmony: A Psychophysical Basis for Perceptual Tensions and Resolutions in Music
title_short The Science of Harmony: A Psychophysical Basis for Perceptual Tensions and Resolutions in Music
title_sort science of harmony: a psychophysical basis for perceptual tensions and resolutions in music
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7006947/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32043080
http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/2019/2369041
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