Talker adaptation or "talker" adaptation? Musical instrument variability impedes pitch perception

Atten Percept Psychophys. 2023 Oct;85(7):2488-2501. doi: 10.3758/s13414-023-02722-4. Epub 2023 May 31.

Abstract

Listeners show perceptual benefits (faster and/or more accurate responses) when perceiving speech spoken by a single talker versus multiple talkers, known as talker adaptation. While near-exclusively studied in speech and with talkers, some aspects of talker adaptation might reflect domain-general processes. Music, like speech, is a sound class replete with acoustic variation, such as a multitude of pitch and instrument possibilities. Thus, it was hypothesized that perceptual benefits from structure in the acoustic signal (i.e., hearing the same sound source on every trial) are not specific to speech but rather a general auditory response. Forty nonmusician participants completed a simple musical task that mirrored talker adaptation paradigms. Low- or high-pitched notes were presented in single- and mixed-instrument blocks. Reflecting both music research on pitch and timbre interdependence and mirroring traditional "talker" adaptation paradigms, listeners were faster to make their pitch judgments when presented with a single instrument timbre relative to when the timbre was selected from one of four instruments from trial to trial. A second experiment ruled out the possibility that participants were responding faster to the specific instrument chosen as the single-instrument timbre. Consistent with general theoretical approaches to perception, perceptual benefits from signal structure are not limited to speech.

Keywords: Music perception; Musical instruments; Pitch; Speech perception; Talker adaptation.

MeSH terms

  • Hearing
  • Hearing Tests
  • Humans
  • Music*
  • Pitch Perception / physiology
  • Speech Perception* / physiology