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Lecture 21. Winding Down on the Room-Head stuff. Last Time. Room Acoustics. ?. dB. How the Brain Reacts to certain sounds. Signal Source Issues Room Acoustics. Topics. DONE. Person Instruments (strings and pipes) Space
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Lecture 21 Winding Down on the Room-Head stuff
Last Time Room Acoustics ? dB How the Brain Reacts to certain sounds Signal Source Issues Room Acoustics
Topics DONE • Person • Instruments (strings and pipes) • Space • Reflection (and properties of walls), Diffraction or Scattering, Interference, Reverberation • Loudness, Hearing, and the Ear • decibels, the parts of the ear, the cochlea • To the Brain • Hair cells to neurons • Processing • Strange things in the mind • To Music • Dum De Dum Dum! (Beethoven!)
A Basic Musical Question WHAT MAKES TWO OR MORE TONES SOUND WELL TOGETHER?
One Observation • Two close frequencies sounding together produce beats. • Beat frequency is the difference between the two frequencies • fbeat=|f1-f2| • We don’t seem to “like” beats. • Beats exist in the sound itself, it is NOT an ear phenomenon.
Consonance – PURE TONES Octave
Think about the Cochlea • Different frequencies “excite” vibrations at different resonance points along the basilar membrane.
Close Frequency Effect one tone sensation
What about a COMPLEX sound?
Single “tone” from a Guitar(or any stringed instrument) Doubling LOG (Frequency) OCTAVE
Two – REAL tones an octave apart Octave They Mesh Nicely !
Two “unrelated” tones Messy
The Fifth and its Harmonics Not AS Messy
Consonance Experiment for two complex tones (overtones) Just What the Greeks Said!
The Strange World of Psychophysics
Strange things can happen in the EAR and in the BRAIN! What about the unexpected???
Munch, Edvard TheScream
Strange Stuff • Play 2 tones (f1 and f2) at equal volumes. • Start the two at the same frequency and gradually sweep the f2 frequency up. • A tone LOWER than f1 will be heard my most people! • This is a “difference tone” = |f2-f1| • As f2 approaches 2f1, a rough tone and then something beat-like is heard. • Beats of a “mistuned consonance”.
The “signal” BEATS MISTUNEDCONSONANCE
Two Tones, a Fifth apart f0 = 1/t0=(1/2)f1 f0=(3/2)f1 Fundamental Tracking Subjective Pitch
Reality • The thickness of the membrane is also a function of position. • My previous model leaves this out. • This actually reverses things a bit. • Do not worry about this mere fact. • Important point is that the cochlea has a resonant frequency that is a function of position along it.
Beethoven And that's where music comes from!