Music perception/Related Articles
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
- See also changes related to Music perception, or pages that link to Music perception or to this page or whose text contains "Music perception".
Parent topics
- Music [r]: The art of structuring time by combining sound and silence into rhythm, harmonies and melodies. [e]
- Perception [r]: The reception of information by the nervous system. [e]
- Music psychology [r]: The study of how, when, where and why people engage in music and dance. [e]
Subtopics
- Auditory illusion [r]: The distorted perception of sound. [e]
- Pitch perception [r]: The process of interpreting sounds in terms of the fundamental frequencies and overtones contained therein. [e]
- Absolute pitch [r]: The ability to correctly label timbres or chords with the corresponding musical notes, instantly and without an external pitch reference. [e]
- Timbre [r]: That attribute of auditory sensation in terms of which a listener can judge that two sounds similarly presented and having the same loudness and pitch are dissimilar [e]
- Chord (music) [r]: A set of tones perceived separately with separate timbres, for example, as played simultaneously on the same musical instrument. [e]
- Rhythm perception [r]: The process of interpreting sounds in terms of their timing. [e]
- Acoustics [r]: The study of sound. [e]
- Auditory system [r]: A sensory system used by animals for the processing of sound pressure variation. [e]
- Music production [r]: Principles of generating sounds and music. [e]
- Pitch (music) [r]: Perceived frequency of a sound or musical tone. [e]
- Tone (music) [r]: The sound produced by a musical instrument while playing a particular musical note. [e]
- Depersonalization disorder [r]: A dissociative disorder characterized by a persistent or recurring experience of unreality, where individuals report an experience akin to living in a movie or dream, feeling detached from their body and emotions, and not being in control of their life. [e]
- Language and music [r]: Forms of communication that has a number of common neurobiological, evolutionary and formal similarities and at the same time differing in syntax and meaning. [e]