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Pitch and timbre are two primary features of auditory perception that are generally considered independent. However, an increase in pitch (produced by a change in fundamental frequency) can be confused with an increase in brightness (an attribute of timbre related to spectral centroid) and vice versa. Previous work indicates that pitch and timbre are processed in overlapping regions of the auditory cortex, but are separable to some extent via multivoxel pattern analysis. Here, we tested whether attention to one or other feature increases the spatial separation of their cortical representations and if attention can enhance the cortical representation of these features in the absence of any physical change in the stimulus. Ten human subjects (four female, six male) listened to pairs of tone triplets varying in pitch, timbre, or both and judged which tone triplet had the higher pitch or brighter timbre. Variations in each feature engaged common auditory regions with no clear distinctions at a univariate level. Attending to one did not improve the separability of the neural representations of pitch and timbre at the univariate level. At the multivariate level, the classifier performed above chance in distinguishing between conditions in which pitch or timbre was discriminated. The results confirm that the computations underlying pitch and timbre perception are subserved by strongly overlapping cortical regions, but reveal that attention to one or other feature leads to distinguishable activation patterns even in the absence of physical differences in the stimuli. Although pitch and timbre are generally thought of as independent auditory features of a sound, pitch height and timbral brightness can be confused for one another. This study shows that pitch and timbre variations are represented in overlapping regions of auditory cortex, but that they produce distinguishable patterns of activation. Most importantly, the patterns of activation can be distinguished based on whether subjects attended to pitch or timbre even when the stimuli remained physically identical. The results therefore show that variations in pitch and timbre are represented by overlapping neural networks, but that attention to different features of the same sound can lead to distinguishable patterns of activation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0588-18.2019 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
August 2025
Sydney Conservatorium of Music, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Music can shape the vividness, sentiment, and content of directed mental imagery. Yet, the role of specific musical features in these effects remains elusive. One important aspect of human musical performances is the presence of micro-variations-small deviations in timbre, pitch, and timing, driven by motor and attentional processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
August 2025
School of Psychology, Aston University, Birmingham B4 7ET, United Kingdom.
In duplex perception, an acoustic element differing from the others in receiving ear or form (e.g., harmonic complex or sinusoidal) contributes simultaneously to two distinct percepts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurocase
August 2025
National Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, Center for Comprehensive Care and Research on Memory Disorders, Obu, Aichi, Japan.
Absolute pitch (AP) is the ability to identify the pitch of isolated tones without reference to an external pitch. A 21-year-old semi-professional musician with a previous ability for AP developed a left-hemispheric cerebral hemorrhage due to an arteriovenous malformation (AVM). One month after the hemorrhage, she underwent surgery to treat the AVM, resulting in the resolution of her aphasia and right upper limb clumsiness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOtol Neurotol
July 2025
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, CA.
Hypothesis: To determine whether chronic use of experimental computed tomography (CT)-based frequency allocations would improve cochlear implant (CI) user performance in the areas of speech and music perception, as compared to the clinical default frequency mapping provided by the CI manufacturer.
Background: CIs utilize default frequency maps to distribute the frequency range important for speech perception across their electrode array. Clinical default frequency maps do not address the significant frequency-place mismatch that is inherent after cochlear implantation, nor the variability between individual anatomy or array lengths.
PLoS One
July 2025
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, United States of America.
Previous studies have established that musical pitch and timbre (specifically, spectral shape) perceptually covary: lower pitches are associated with darker timbres (less higher-frequency energy) and higher pitches are associated with brighter timbres (more higher-frequency energy). In four experiments, perceptual sensitivity to this relationship was assessed in pitch labeling tasks when instrument timbre varied in ways that respected or violated this pattern (Consistent or Reversed trials). Performance was influenced by context at multiple timescales: block-level (stimulus type), experimental session-level (block order or configuration), and longer-term experience (musical training background).
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