2016
DOI: 10.1177/0305735615625791
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Probing imagined tempo for music: Effects of motor engagement and musical experience

Abstract: Both musically trained and untrained adults can reproduce the tempo of familiar music with high precision. However, conflicting evidence exists as to how well representations of tempo are preserved within musical imagery. The present study investigated whether previous conflicting evidence might result from the use of different tasks to measure imagined tempo. Tempo judgments for familiar music were collected in a repeated-measures design using two imagined music tasks and one perceived music task. In one imag… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…This high precision of tempo recall has been corroborated in subsequent work in which INMI episodes were sung into a recording device, with a reported mean deviation from the original tempo of approximately 12 % (McNally-Gagnon, 2016 ). Comparisons to a separate study in which participants were asked to tap the tempo of pop songs in a VMI task (Jakubowski, Farrugia, & Stewart, 2016 ) suggest that musical tempo recall within INMI is as, or perhaps even more, accurate than tempo recall within VMI (mean deviation from the original tempo in VMI task = 18.4 %). However, this difference could potentially be attributed to design differences between the studies; for instance, Jakubowski et al ( 2016 ) was a laboratory-based study using experimenter-selected pop songs whereas Jakubowski et al ( 2015 ) was a naturalistic, diary study in which participants recorded all INMI episodes as they occurred.…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…This high precision of tempo recall has been corroborated in subsequent work in which INMI episodes were sung into a recording device, with a reported mean deviation from the original tempo of approximately 12 % (McNally-Gagnon, 2016 ). Comparisons to a separate study in which participants were asked to tap the tempo of pop songs in a VMI task (Jakubowski, Farrugia, & Stewart, 2016 ) suggest that musical tempo recall within INMI is as, or perhaps even more, accurate than tempo recall within VMI (mean deviation from the original tempo in VMI task = 18.4 %). However, this difference could potentially be attributed to design differences between the studies; for instance, Jakubowski et al ( 2016 ) was a laboratory-based study using experimenter-selected pop songs whereas Jakubowski et al ( 2015 ) was a naturalistic, diary study in which participants recorded all INMI episodes as they occurred.…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Comparisons to a separate study in which participants were asked to tap the tempo of pop songs in a VMI task (Jakubowski, Farrugia, & Stewart, 2016 ) suggest that musical tempo recall within INMI is as, or perhaps even more, accurate than tempo recall within VMI (mean deviation from the original tempo in VMI task = 18.4 %). However, this difference could potentially be attributed to design differences between the studies; for instance, Jakubowski et al ( 2016 ) was a laboratory-based study using experimenter-selected pop songs whereas Jakubowski et al ( 2015 ) was a naturalistic, diary study in which participants recorded all INMI episodes as they occurred. In addition, potentially confounding variables such as familiarity with a tune and recency of hearing it aloud cannot be accounted for when comparing these studies.…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…3 begins in the key of D minor is different from imagining the sound of the first chords or the feel of playing the piano line. The pitch (Aleman et al, 2000 ), timing (Janata and Paroo, 2006 ; Jakubowski et al, 2016 ), dynamics (Wu et al, 2011 ; Bishop et al, 2014 ), and timbre (Halpern et al, 2004 ) of perceived music can be imagined with high veridicality. Emotion is also perceived similarly in sounded and imagined music (Lucas et al, 2010 ).…”
Section: Mechanisms For Musical Creativitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other studies using Tempo Judgment paradigms (see Table 1) ask participants to listen to or imagine specific pieces of music and indicate what they believed to be the correct tempo (Jakubowski et al, 2015, 2016). Unsurprisingly, people are most accurate when listening to a song (Jakubowski et al, 2016).…”
Section: Key Concepts From An Auditory Imagery Approach To Musical Immentioning
confidence: 99%