We used implicit and explicit tasks to measure knowledge of Western harmony in musically trained and untrained Canadian children. Younger children were 6–7 years of age; older children were 10–11. On each trial, participants heard a sequence of five piano chords. The first four chords established a major-key context. The final chord was the standard, expected tonic of the context or one of two deviant endings: the highly unexpected flat supertonic or the moderately unexpected subdominant. In the implicit task, children identified the timbre of the final chord (guitar or piano) as quickly as possible. Response times were faster for the tonic ending than for either deviant ending, but the magnitude of the priming effect was similar for the two deviants, and the effect did not vary as a function of age or music training. In the explicit task, children rated how good each chord sequence sounded. Ratings were highest for sequences with the tonic ending, intermediate for the subdominant, and lowest for the flat supertonic. Moreover, the difference between the tonic and deviant sequences was larger for older children with music training. Thus, the explicit task provided a more nuanced picture of musical knowledge than did the implicit task.
Publication
Année de publication : 2022
Type :
Article de journal
Article de journal
Auteurs :
Corrigall, K. A.
Tillmann, B.
& Schellenberg, E. G.
Corrigall, K. A.
Tillmann, B.
& Schellenberg, E. G.
Titre du journal :
Music Perception
Music Perception
Volume du journal :
39(4), 361–370
39(4), 361–370
Mots-clés :
music, harmony, children, development, music training
music, harmony, children, development, music training
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