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- Title
Abnormal pitch--time interference in congenital amusia: evidence from an implicit test.
- Authors
Pfeuty, Micha; Peretz, Isabelle
- Abstract
Congenital amusia, characterized by a severe problem in detecting anomalies in melodies, is a lifelong disorder that has been ascribed to an acoustical pitch deficit. In the present study, we investigated how the perception of a duration is altered when it is bounded by tones varying in pitch. The results show that temporal accuracy is impaired by pitch variations as small as a quarter of a semitone in control participants, whereas it is impaired only when pitch variations are increased to 4 semitones in congenital amusics. Furthermore, control participants associate intervals bounded by low- and high-pitched tones with long and short durations, respectively. Amusic participants do not make this connection, even with large pitch differences, pointing to a deficit in pitch-time integration. Thus, our results are consistent with the notion that congenital amusia is linked to a neurogenetic anomaly that impairs pitch processing, independently of task factors.
- Publication
Attention, perception & psychophysics, 2010, Vol 72, Issue 3, p763
- ISSN
1943-393X
- Publication type
Journal Article
- DOI
10.3758/APP.72.3.763