Equivalence: Difference between revisions

From Xenharmonic Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Wikispaces>EIHdzP
**Imported revision 626098231 - Original comment: **
 
Wikispaces>FREEZE
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
<h2>IMPORTED REVISION FROM WIKISPACES</h2>
It's a phenomenon of psycho-acoustics that two notes an octave apart are considered "equivalent" to the brain. The question of whether this generalizes or can generalize to other intervals is still being studied.
This is an imported revision from Wikispaces. The revision metadata is included below for reference:<br>
: This revision was by author [[User:EIHdzP|EIHdzP]] and made on <tt>2018-02-07 14:20:22 UTC</tt>.<br>
: The original revision id was <tt>626098231</tt>.<br>
: The revision comment was: <tt></tt><br>
The revision contents are below, presented both in the original Wikispaces Wikitext format, and in HTML exactly as Wikispaces rendered it.<br>
<h4>Original Wikitext content:</h4>
<div style="width:100%; max-height:400pt; overflow:auto; background-color:#f8f9fa; border: 1px solid #eaecf0; padding:0em"><pre style="margin:0px;border:none;background:none;word-wrap:break-word;white-space: pre-wrap ! important" class="old-revision-html">It's a phenomenon of psycho-acoustics that two notes an octave apart are considered "equivalent" to the brain. The question of whether this generalizes or can generalize to other intervals is still being studied.</pre></div>
<h4>Original HTML content:</h4>
<div style="width:100%; max-height:400pt; overflow:auto; background-color:#f8f9fa; border: 1px solid #eaecf0; padding:0em"><pre style="margin:0px;border:none;background:none;word-wrap:break-word;width:200%;white-space: pre-wrap ! important" class="old-revision-html">&lt;html&gt;&lt;head&gt;&lt;title&gt;equivalence&lt;/title&gt;&lt;/head&gt;&lt;body&gt;It's a phenomenon of psycho-acoustics that two notes an octave apart are considered &amp;quot;equivalent&amp;quot; to the brain. The question of whether this generalizes or can generalize to other intervals is still being studied.&lt;/body&gt;&lt;/html&gt;</pre></div>

Revision as of 00:00, 17 July 2018

It's a phenomenon of psycho-acoustics that two notes an octave apart are considered "equivalent" to the brain. The question of whether this generalizes or can generalize to other intervals is still being studied.