Consonance and dissonance: Difference between revisions
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A study by Kameoka & Kuriyagawa in 1969 had listeners grade the roughness of two sine waves played simultaneously at equal intensity. They computed that if the lower sine wave has frequency ''f''<sub>1</sub> Hz, then the upper frequency that maximizes roughness is about <math>f_2 = f_1 + 2.27 f_1^{0.477}\ \text{Hz}</math>. This assumes that each sine wave has intensity 57 dB SPL; the formula changes slightly depending on volume. The interval <math>f_2/f_1</math> is about 1.56 semitones at 440 Hz, and narrows as frequency increases. | A study by Kameoka & Kuriyagawa in 1969 had listeners grade the roughness of two sine waves played simultaneously at equal intensity. They computed that if the lower sine wave has frequency ''f''<sub>1</sub> Hz, then the upper frequency that maximizes roughness is about <math>f_2 = f_1 + 2.27 f_1^{0.477}\ \text{Hz}</math>. This assumes that each sine wave has intensity 57 dB SPL; the formula changes slightly depending on volume. The interval <math>f_2/f_1</math> is about 1.56 semitones at 440 Hz, and narrows as frequency increases. | ||
To address some possible misconceptions, sensory dissonance is not musical dissonance, and it has nothing to do with approximation to e.g. JI intervals. It's specifically about the basilar membrane's ability to separate nearby partials. Sensory dissonance only happens when the constituent tones are played simultaneously, not necessarily in succession. Also, it's important that the partials have comparable volumes; if one is much quieter than the other | To address some possible misconceptions, sensory dissonance is not musical dissonance, and it has nothing to do with approximation to e.g. JI intervals. It's specifically about the basilar membrane's ability to separate nearby partials. Sensory dissonance only happens when the constituent tones are played simultaneously, not necessarily in succession. Also, it's important that the partials have comparable volumes; if one is much quieter than the other, then it may be masked. | ||
== References == | == References == |