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Absolute pitch

Absolute pitch (AP), often called perfect pitch, is the ability to identify or re-create a given musical note without the benefit of a reference tone.[1][2] AP may be demonstrated using linguistic labelling ("naming" a note), associating mental imagery with the note, or sensorimotor responses. For example, an AP possessor can accurately reproduce a heard tone on a musical instrument without "hunting" for the correct pitch.[3][4]

The frequency of AP in the general population is not known. A proportion of 1 in 10,000 is widely reported, but not supported by evidence;[5] a 2019 review indicated a prevalence of at least 4% amongst music students.[6]

Generally, absolute pitch implies some or all of these abilities, achieved without a reference tone:[7]

  • Identify by name individual pitches played on various instruments.
  • Name the key of a given piece of tonal music.
  • Identify and name all the tones of a given chord or other tonal mass.
  • Name the pitches of common everyday sounds such as car horns and alarms.

The allied ability to sing a note on demand, which by itself is termed "perfect pitch", appears to be much rarer.[8]

Absolute pitch is separate from relative pitch. While the ability to name specific pitches might be used to identify intervals, relative pitch would identify the interval directly by its sound. Absolute pitch may complement relative pitch in musical listening and practice, but it can also interfere with its development.[9]

Adults who possess relative pitch but do not already have absolute pitch can learn "pseudo-absolute pitch" and become able to identify notes in a way that superficially resembles absolute pitch.[10] Some people have been able to develop accurate pitch identification in adulthood, through training.[11]

Scientific studies

History of study and terminologies

Scientific studies of absolute pitch commenced by the 19th century, focusing on the phenomenon of musical pitch and methods of measuring it.[12] It would have been difficult for the notion of absolute pitch to have formed earlier because pitch references were not consistent. For example, the note known as 'A' varied in different local or national musical traditions between what is considered as G sharp and B flat before the standardisation of the late 19th century. While the term absolute pitch, or absolute ear, was in use by the late 19th century by both British[13] and German researchers,[14] its application was not universal; other terms such as musical ear,[12] absolute tone consciousness,[15] or positive pitch[16] referred to the same ability. The skill is not exclusively musical.

Difference in cognition, not elementary sensation

Physically and functionally, the auditory system of an absolute listener evidently does not differ from that of a non-absolute listener.[17] Rather, "it reflects a particular ability to analyze frequency information, presumably involving high-level cortical processing."[18] Absolute pitch is an act of cognition, needing memory of the frequency, a label for the frequency (such as "B-flat"), and exposure to the range of sound encompassed by that categorical label. Absolute pitch may be directly analogous to recognizing colors, phonemes (speech sounds), or other categorical perception of sensory stimuli. For example, most people have learned to recognize and name the color blue by the range of frequencies of the electromagnetic radiation that are perceived as light, those who have been exposed to musical notes together with their names early in life may be more likely to identify the note C.[19] Although it was once thought that it "might be nothing more than a general human capacity whose expression is strongly biased by the level and type of exposure to music that people experience in a given culture",[20] absolute pitch may be influenced by genetic variation, possibly an autosomal dominant genetic trait.[21][22][23][24][25]

Influence by music experience

Evidence suggests that absolute pitch sense is influenced by cultural exposure to music, especially in the familiarization of the equal-tempered C-major scale. Most of the absolute listeners that were tested in this respect identified the C-major tones more reliably and, except for B, more quickly than the five "black key" tones,[26] which corresponds to the higher prevalence of these tones in ordinary musical experiences. One study of Dutch non-musicians also demonstrated a bias toward using C-major tones in ordinary speech, especially on syllables related to emphasis.[27]

Linguistics

Absolute pitch is more common among speakers of tonal languages, such as most dialects of Chinese or Vietnamese, which depend on pitch variation to distinguish words that otherwise sound the same—e.g., Mandarin with four possible tonal variations, Cantonese with nine, Southern Min with seven or eight (depending on dialect), and Vietnamese with six.[28][29] Speakers of Sino-Tibetan languages have been reported to speak a word in the same absolute pitch (within a quarter-tone) on different days; it has therefore been suggested that absolute pitch may be acquired by infants when they learn to speak a tonal language[30] (and possibly also by infants when they learn to speak a pitch-accent language). However, the brains of tonal-language speakers do not naturally process musical sound as language;[31] such speakers may be more likely to acquire absolute pitch for musical tones when they later receive musical training. Many native speakers of a tone language, even those with little musical training, are observed to sing a given song with consistent pitch. Among music students of East Asian ethnic heritage, those who speak a tone language fluently have a higher prevalence of absolute pitch than those who do not speak a tone language.[32][33][34]

African level-tone languages—such as Yoruba,[35] with three pitch levels, and Mambila,[36] with four—may be better suited to study the role of absolute pitch in speech than the pitch and contour tone languages of East Asia.

Speakers of European languages make subconscious use of an absolute pitch memory when speaking.[37]

Perception

Absolute pitch is the ability to perceive pitch class and to mentally categorize sounds according to perceived pitch class.[38] A pitch class is the set of all pitches that are a whole number of octaves apart. While the boundaries of musical pitch categories vary among human cultures, the recognition of octave relationships is a natural characteristic of the mammalian auditory system.[39][40][41][42][43][44] Accordingly, absolute pitch is not the ability to estimate a pitch value from the dimension of pitch-evoking frequency (30–5000 Hz),[19] but to identify a pitch class category within the dimension of pitch class (e.g., C-C-D ... B-C).

An absolute listener's sense of hearing is typically no keener than that of a non-absolute ("normal") listener.[45] Absolute pitch does not depend upon a refined ability to perceive and discriminate gradations of sound frequencies,[46] but upon detecting and categorizing a subjective perceptual quality typically referred to as "chroma".[47][clarification needed] The two tasks— of identification (recognizing and naming a pitch) and discrimination (detecting changes or differences in rate of vibration)— are accomplished with different brain mechanisms.[48]

Special populations

The prevalence of absolute pitch is higher among those who are blind from birth as a result of optic nerve hypoplasia.

Absolute pitch is considerably more common among those whose early childhood was spent in East Asia.[49][50][51][52] This might seem to be a genetic difference;[53] however, people of East Asian ancestry who are reared in North America are significantly less likely to develop absolute pitch than those raised in East Asia,[52] so the difference is more probably explained by experience. The language that is spoken may be an important factor; many East Asians speak tonal languages such as Mandarin, Cantonese, and Thai, while others (such as those in Japan and certain provinces of Korea) speak pitch-accent languages, and the prevalence of absolute pitch may be partly explained by exposure to pitches together with meaningful musical labels very early in life.[50][51][52][54]

Absolute pitch ability has higher prevalence among those with Williams syndrome[55] and those with an autism spectrum disorder, with claims estimating that up to 30% of autistic people have absolute pitch.[56][57][58] A non-verbal piano-matching method resulted in a correlation of 97% between[clarification needed] autism and absolute pitch, with a 53% correlation in non-autistic observers[clarification needed].[59] However, the converse is not indicated by research which found no difference between those with AP and those without on measures of social and communication skills, which are core deficits in autistic spectrum disorders. Additionally, the AP group's autism-spectrum quotient was "way below clinical thresholds".[60]

Nature vs. nurture

Absolute pitch might be achievable by any human being during a critical period of auditory development,[61][62] after which period cognitive strategies favor global and relational processing. Proponents of the critical-period theory agree that the presence of absolute pitch ability is dependent on learning, but there is disagreement about whether training causes absolute skills to occur[63][64][65][66] or lack of training causes absolute perception to be overwhelmed and obliterated by relative perception of musical intervals.[67][68]

One or more genetic loci could affect absolute pitch ability, a predisposition for learning the ability or signal the likelihood of its spontaneous occurrence.[23][25][24]

Researchers have been trying to teach absolute pitch ability in laboratory settings for more than a century,[69] and various commercial absolute-pitch training courses have been offered to the public since the early 1900s.[70] In 2013, experimenters reported that adult men who took the antiseizure drug valproate (VPA) "learned to identify pitch significantly better than those taking placebo—evidence that VPA facilitated critical-period learning in the adult human brain".[71] However, no adult has ever been documented to have acquired absolute listening ability,[72] because all adults who have been formally tested after AP training have failed to demonstrate "an unqualified level of accuracy... comparable to that of AP possessors".[73]

Pitch memory related to musical context

While very few people have the ability to name a pitch with no external reference, pitch memory can be activated by repeated exposure.[74] People who are not skilled singers will often sing popular songs in the correct key,[75] and can usually recognize when TV themes have been shifted into the wrong key.[76] Members of the Venda culture in South Africa also sing familiar children's songs in the key in which the songs were learned.[77]

This phenomenon is apparently unrelated to musical training. The skill may be associated more closely with vocal production. Violin students learning the Suzuki method are required to memorize each composition in a fixed key and play it from memory on their instrument, but they are not required to sing. When tested, these students did not succeed in singing the memorized Suzuki songs in the original, fixed key.[78]

Possible problems

Musicians with absolute perception may experience difficulties which do not exist for other musicians. Because absolute listeners are capable of recognizing that a musical composition has been transposed from its original key, or that a pitch is being produced at a nonstandard frequency (either sharp or flat), a musician with absolute pitch may become distressed upon perceiving tones believed to be "wrong" or hearing a piece of music "in the wrong key". This can especially apply to Baroque music that is recorded in Baroque tuning (usually A = 415 Hz as opposed to 440 Hz, i.e., roughly a half step or semitone lower than standard concert pitch).[56] An absolute listener may also use absolute strategies for tasks which are more efficiently accomplished with relative strategies, such as transposition[79] or producing harmony for tones whose frequencies do not match standard equal temperament.[80] It is also possible for some musicians to have displaced absolute pitch, where all notes are slightly flat or slightly sharp of their respective pitch as defined by a given convention.[citation needed] This may arise from learning the pitch names from an instrument that was tuned to a concert pitch convention other than the one in use, e.g., A = 435 Hz (the Paris Opera convention of the late 19th and early 20th centuries) as opposed to the Anglo-American modern standard A = 440 Hz. When playing in groups with other musicians, this may lead to playing in a tonality that is slightly different from that of the rest of the group.[citation needed]

Synesthesia

Absolute pitch shows a genetic overlap with music-related and non-music-related synesthesia/ideasthesia.[25] They may associate certain notes or keys with different colors, enabling them to tell what any note or key is. In this study, about 20% of people with perfect pitch are also synesthetes.

Correlations

There is evidence of a higher rate of absolute pitch in the autistic population.[81] Many studies have examined pitch abilities in autism, but not rigidly perfect pitch, which makes it a controversial study. It is unclear just how many people with autism have perfect pitch because of this. In a 2009 study, researchers studied 72 teenagers with autism and found that 20 percent of the teenagers had a significant ability to detect pitches. Children with autism are especially sensitive to changes in pitch.[82]

Correlation with musical talent

Absolute pitch is not a prerequisite for skilled musical performance or composition. However, there is evidence that musicians with absolute pitch tend to perform better on musical transcription tasks (controlling for age of onset and amount of musical training) compared to those without absolute pitch.[83] It was previously argued that musicians with absolute pitch perform worse than those without absolute pitch on recognition of musical intervals;[84] however, experiments on which this conclusion was based contained an artifact and, when this artifact was removed, absolute pitch possessors were found to perform better than nonpossessors on recognition of musical intervals.[85]

See also

References

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External links

  • Comprehensive historical bibliography of absolute pitch research, 1876–present
  • Another , with +300 papers

absolute, pitch, perfect, pitch, redirects, here, confused, with, pitch, perfect, often, called, perfect, pitch, ability, identify, create, given, musical, note, without, benefit, reference, tone, demonstrated, using, linguistic, labelling, naming, note, assoc. Perfect pitch redirects here Not to be confused with Pitch Perfect Absolute pitch AP often called perfect pitch is the ability to identify or re create a given musical note without the benefit of a reference tone 1 2 AP may be demonstrated using linguistic labelling naming a note associating mental imagery with the note or sensorimotor responses For example an AP possessor can accurately reproduce a heard tone on a musical instrument without hunting for the correct pitch 3 4 The frequency of AP in the general population is not known A proportion of 1 in 10 000 is widely reported but not supported by evidence 5 a 2019 review indicated a prevalence of at least 4 amongst music students 6 Generally absolute pitch implies some or all of these abilities achieved without a reference tone 7 Identify by name individual pitches played on various instruments Name the key of a given piece of tonal music Identify and name all the tones of a given chord or other tonal mass Name the pitches of common everyday sounds such as car horns and alarms The allied ability to sing a note on demand which by itself is termed perfect pitch appears to be much rarer 8 Absolute pitch is separate from relative pitch While the ability to name specific pitches might be used to identify intervals relative pitch would identify the interval directly by its sound Absolute pitch may complement relative pitch in musical listening and practice but it can also interfere with its development 9 Adults who possess relative pitch but do not already have absolute pitch can learn pseudo absolute pitch and become able to identify notes in a way that superficially resembles absolute pitch 10 Some people have been able to develop accurate pitch identification in adulthood through training 11 Contents 1 Scientific studies 1 1 History of study and terminologies 1 2 Difference in cognition not elementary sensation 1 3 Influence by music experience 1 4 Linguistics 1 5 Perception 1 6 Special populations 1 7 Nature vs nurture 1 8 Pitch memory related to musical context 1 9 Possible problems 1 10 Synesthesia 2 Correlations 2 1 Correlation with musical talent 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksScientific studies EditHistory of study and terminologies Edit Scientific studies of absolute pitch commenced by the 19th century focusing on the phenomenon of musical pitch and methods of measuring it 12 It would have been difficult for the notion of absolute pitch to have formed earlier because pitch references were not consistent For example the note known as A varied in different local or national musical traditions between what is considered as G sharp and B flat before the standardisation of the late 19th century While the term absolute pitch or absolute ear was in use by the late 19th century by both British 13 and German researchers 14 its application was not universal other terms such as musical ear 12 absolute tone consciousness 15 or positive pitch 16 referred to the same ability The skill is not exclusively musical Difference in cognition not elementary sensation Edit Physically and functionally the auditory system of an absolute listener evidently does not differ from that of a non absolute listener 17 Rather it reflects a particular ability to analyze frequency information presumably involving high level cortical processing 18 Absolute pitch is an act of cognition needing memory of the frequency a label for the frequency such as B flat and exposure to the range of sound encompassed by that categorical label Absolute pitch may be directly analogous to recognizing colors phonemes speech sounds or other categorical perception of sensory stimuli For example most people have learned to recognize and name the color blue by the range of frequencies of the electromagnetic radiation that are perceived as light those who have been exposed to musical notes together with their names early in life may be more likely to identify the note C 19 Although it was once thought that it might be nothing more than a general human capacity whose expression is strongly biased by the level and type of exposure to music that people experience in a given culture 20 absolute pitch may be influenced by genetic variation possibly an autosomal dominant genetic trait 21 22 23 24 25 Influence by music experience Edit Evidence suggests that absolute pitch sense is influenced by cultural exposure to music especially in the familiarization of the equal tempered C major scale Most of the absolute listeners that were tested in this respect identified the C major tones more reliably and except for B more quickly than the five black key tones 26 which corresponds to the higher prevalence of these tones in ordinary musical experiences One study of Dutch non musicians also demonstrated a bias toward using C major tones in ordinary speech especially on syllables related to emphasis 27 Linguistics Edit Absolute pitch is more common among speakers of tonal languages such as most dialects of Chinese or Vietnamese which depend on pitch variation to distinguish words that otherwise sound the same e g Mandarin with four possible tonal variations Cantonese with nine Southern Min with seven or eight depending on dialect and Vietnamese with six 28 29 Speakers of Sino Tibetan languages have been reported to speak a word in the same absolute pitch within a quarter tone on different days it has therefore been suggested that absolute pitch may be acquired by infants when they learn to speak a tonal language 30 and possibly also by infants when they learn to speak a pitch accent language However the brains of tonal language speakers do not naturally process musical sound as language 31 such speakers may be more likely to acquire absolute pitch for musical tones when they later receive musical training Many native speakers of a tone language even those with little musical training are observed to sing a given song with consistent pitch Among music students of East Asian ethnic heritage those who speak a tone language fluently have a higher prevalence of absolute pitch than those who do not speak a tone language 32 33 34 African level tone languages such as Yoruba 35 with three pitch levels and Mambila 36 with four may be better suited to study the role of absolute pitch in speech than the pitch and contour tone languages of East Asia Speakers of European languages make subconscious use of an absolute pitch memory when speaking 37 Perception Edit Absolute pitch is the ability to perceive pitch class and to mentally categorize sounds according to perceived pitch class 38 A pitch class is the set of all pitches that are a whole number of octaves apart While the boundaries of musical pitch categories vary among human cultures the recognition of octave relationships is a natural characteristic of the mammalian auditory system 39 40 41 42 43 44 Accordingly absolute pitch is not the ability to estimate a pitch value from the dimension of pitch evoking frequency 30 5000 Hz 19 but to identify a pitch class category within the dimension of pitch class e g C C D B C An absolute listener s sense of hearing is typically no keener than that of a non absolute normal listener 45 Absolute pitch does not depend upon a refined ability to perceive and discriminate gradations of sound frequencies 46 but upon detecting and categorizing a subjective perceptual quality typically referred to as chroma 47 clarification needed The two tasks of identification recognizing and naming a pitch and discrimination detecting changes or differences in rate of vibration are accomplished with different brain mechanisms 48 Special populations Edit The prevalence of absolute pitch is higher among those who are blind from birth as a result of optic nerve hypoplasia Absolute pitch is considerably more common among those whose early childhood was spent in East Asia 49 50 51 52 This might seem to be a genetic difference 53 however people of East Asian ancestry who are reared in North America are significantly less likely to develop absolute pitch than those raised in East Asia 52 so the difference is more probably explained by experience The language that is spoken may be an important factor many East Asians speak tonal languages such as Mandarin Cantonese and Thai while others such as those in Japan and certain provinces of Korea speak pitch accent languages and the prevalence of absolute pitch may be partly explained by exposure to pitches together with meaningful musical labels very early in life 50 51 52 54 Absolute pitch ability has higher prevalence among those with Williams syndrome 55 and those with an autism spectrum disorder with claims estimating that up to 30 of autistic people have absolute pitch 56 57 58 A non verbal piano matching method resulted in a correlation of 97 between clarification needed autism and absolute pitch with a 53 correlation in non autistic observers clarification needed 59 However the converse is not indicated by research which found no difference between those with AP and those without on measures of social and communication skills which are core deficits in autistic spectrum disorders Additionally the AP group s autism spectrum quotient was way below clinical thresholds 60 Nature vs nurture Edit Absolute pitch might be achievable by any human being during a critical period of auditory development 61 62 after which period cognitive strategies favor global and relational processing Proponents of the critical period theory agree that the presence of absolute pitch ability is dependent on learning but there is disagreement about whether training causes absolute skills to occur 63 64 65 66 or lack of training causes absolute perception to be overwhelmed and obliterated by relative perception of musical intervals 67 68 One or more genetic loci could affect absolute pitch ability a predisposition for learning the ability or signal the likelihood of its spontaneous occurrence 23 25 24 Researchers have been trying to teach absolute pitch ability in laboratory settings for more than a century 69 and various commercial absolute pitch training courses have been offered to the public since the early 1900s 70 In 2013 experimenters reported that adult men who took the antiseizure drug valproate VPA learned to identify pitch significantly better than those taking placebo evidence that VPA facilitated critical period learning in the adult human brain 71 However no adult has ever been documented to have acquired absolute listening ability 72 because all adults who have been formally tested after AP training have failed to demonstrate an unqualified level of accuracy comparable to that of AP possessors 73 Pitch memory related to musical context Edit While very few people have the ability to name a pitch with no external reference pitch memory can be activated by repeated exposure 74 People who are not skilled singers will often sing popular songs in the correct key 75 and can usually recognize when TV themes have been shifted into the wrong key 76 Members of the Venda culture in South Africa also sing familiar children s songs in the key in which the songs were learned 77 This phenomenon is apparently unrelated to musical training The skill may be associated more closely with vocal production Violin students learning the Suzuki method are required to memorize each composition in a fixed key and play it from memory on their instrument but they are not required to sing When tested these students did not succeed in singing the memorized Suzuki songs in the original fixed key 78 Possible problems Edit Musicians with absolute perception may experience difficulties which do not exist for other musicians Because absolute listeners are capable of recognizing that a musical composition has been transposed from its original key or that a pitch is being produced at a nonstandard frequency either sharp or flat a musician with absolute pitch may become distressed upon perceiving tones believed to be wrong or hearing a piece of music in the wrong key This can especially apply to Baroque music that is recorded in Baroque tuning usually A 415 Hz as opposed to 440 Hz i e roughly a half step or semitone lower than standard concert pitch 56 An absolute listener may also use absolute strategies for tasks which are more efficiently accomplished with relative strategies such as transposition 79 or producing harmony for tones whose frequencies do not match standard equal temperament 80 It is also possible for some musicians to have displaced absolute pitch where all notes are slightly flat or slightly sharp of their respective pitch as defined by a given convention citation needed This may arise from learning the pitch names from an instrument that was tuned to a concert pitch convention other than the one in use e g A 435 Hz the Paris Opera convention of the late 19th and early 20th centuries as opposed to the Anglo American modern standard A 440 Hz When playing in groups with other musicians this may lead to playing in a tonality that is slightly different from that of the rest of the group citation needed Synesthesia Edit Absolute pitch shows a genetic overlap with music related and non music related synesthesia ideasthesia 25 They may associate certain notes or keys with different colors enabling them to tell what any note or key is In this study about 20 of people with perfect pitch are also synesthetes Correlations EditThere is evidence of a higher rate of absolute pitch in the autistic population 81 Many studies have examined pitch abilities in autism but not rigidly perfect pitch which makes it a controversial study It is unclear just how many people with autism have perfect pitch because of this In a 2009 study researchers studied 72 teenagers with autism and found that 20 percent of the teenagers had a significant ability to detect pitches Children with autism are especially sensitive to changes in pitch 82 Correlation with musical talent Edit Absolute pitch is not a prerequisite for skilled musical performance or composition However there is evidence that musicians with absolute pitch tend to perform better on musical transcription tasks controlling for age of onset and amount of musical training compared to those without absolute pitch 83 It was previously argued that musicians with absolute pitch perform worse than those without absolute pitch on recognition of musical intervals 84 however experiments on which this conclusion was based contained an artifact and when this artifact was removed absolute pitch possessors were found to perform better than nonpossessors on recognition of musical intervals 85 See also EditEar training Levitin effect List of people with absolute pitch Discrimination Tonal memoryReferences Edit Deutsch D 2013 Absolute pitch PDF In D Deutsch ed The Psychology of Music 3rd ed pp 141 182 doi 10 1016 B978 0 12 381460 9 00005 5 ISBN 9780123814609 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Ward W D 1998 Absolute Pitch In D Deutsch ed The Psychology of Music Second ed San Diego Academic Press pp 265 298 ISBN 0 12 213564 4 Zatorre Robert Beckett Christine 1989 Multiple coding strategies in the retention of musical tones by possessors of absolute pitch Memory amp Cognition 17 5 582 589 doi 10 3758 BF03197081 PMID 2796743 Zatorre Robert July 2003 Absolute pitch a model for understanding the influence of genes and development on neural and cognitive function Nature Neuroscience 6 7 692 695 doi 10 1038 nn1085 PMID 12830161 S2CID 7431996 Bachem A November 1955 Absolute Pitch The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 27 6 1180 Bibcode 1955ASAJ 27 1180B doi 10 1121 1 1908155 Carden Jill Cline Tony July 9 2019 Absolute pitch Myths evidence and relevance to music education and performance Psychology of Music 47 6 890 901 doi 10 1177 0305735619856098 ISSN 0305 7356 S2CID 199149622 Parncutt R Levitin D J 2001 Absolute Pitch In Sadie S ed The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians London Macmillan ISBN 1 56159 239 0 Green Aaron March 17 2017 What is Perfect Pitch Do You Have It liveaboutdotcom Retrieved April 28 2022 Miyazaki Ken ichi June 2004 How well do we understand absolute pitch Acoustical Science and Technology 25 6 270 282 doi 10 1250 ast 25 426 AP and RP are actually very different modes of musical pitch processing having incompatible features and therefore it may be possible that one can interfere the development of the other and vice versa Levitin D J 2008 Absolute pitch Both a curse and a blessing In Clockars M Peltomaa M eds Music Meets Medicine Proceedings of the Signe and Ane Gyllenberg Foundation Helsinki Finland Signe and Ane Gyllenberg Foundation pp 124 132 Wong Alan C N Yip Ken H M Lui Kelvin F H Wong Yetta Kwailing January 28 2019 Is it impossible to acquire absolute pitch in adulthood bioRxiv 10 1101 355933 a b Ellis Alexander J November 6 1876 On the Sensitiveness of the Ear to Pitch and Change of Pitch in Music PDF Proceedings of the Musical Association 3 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American Journal of Human Genetics 85 1 112 119 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2009 06 010 PMC 2706961 PMID 19576568 a b Drayna D Manichaikul A DeLange M Snieder H amp Spector T 2001 Genetic correlates of musical pitch recognition in humans Science 291 5510 1969 1972 Bibcode 2001Sci 291 1969D doi 10 1126 science 291 5510 1969 PMID 11239158 a b c Gregersen P K Kowalsky E Lee A Baron Cohen S Fisher S E Asher J E Ballard D Freudenberg J amp Li W 2013 Absolute pitch exhibits phenotypic and genetic overlap with synesthesia Human Molecular Genetics 22 10 2097 104 doi 10 1093 hmg ddt059 PMC 4707203 PMID 23406871 Miyazaki K 1990 The speed of musical pitch identification by absolute pitch possessors Music Perception 8 2 177 188 doi 10 2307 40285495 JSTOR 40285495 Braun M 2002 Absolute pitch in emphasized speech Acoustics Research Letters Online 3 2 77 82 doi 10 1121 1 1472336 Deutsch D Henthorn T Dolson M 1999 Tone Language Speakers Possess Absolute Pitch The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 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1 4824450 PMID 24180794 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Connell B Ladd D R 1990 Aspects of pitch realization in Yoruba Phonology 7 1 29 doi 10 1017 S095267570000110X S2CID 62215611 Connell B 2000 The perception of lexical tone in Mambila Language and Speech 43 2 163 182 doi 10 1177 00238309000430020201 PMID 11064955 S2CID 27622788 Braun M 2001 Speech mirrors norm tones Absolute pitch as a normal but precognitive trait PDF Acoustics Research Letters Online 2 3 85 90 doi 10 1121 1 1376728 permanent dead link Rakowski A 1993 Categorical perception in absolute pitch Archives of Acoustics Quarterly 18 515 523 Morest D K 1965 The laminar structure of the medial geniculate body of the cat Journal of Anatomy 99 Pt 1 143 160 PMC 1261468 PMID 14245341 Cetas J S Price R O Crowe J J Velenovsky D S McMullen N T 2003 Dendritic orientation and laminar architecture in the rabbit auditory thalamus The Journal of Comparative Neurology 458 3 307 317 doi 10 1002 cne 10595 PMID 12619083 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PDF on March 7 2008 Retrieved July 22 2007 Deutsch D Henthorn T amp Dolson M 2004 Absolute pitch speech and tone language Some experiments and a proposed framework PDF Music Perception 21 3 339 356 doi 10 1525 mp 2004 21 3 339 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Lenhoff H M Perales O amp Hickok G 2001 Absolute pitch in Williams syndrome Music Perception 18 4 491 503 doi 10 1525 mp 2001 18 4 491 a b Sacks O 2007 Musicophilia Tales of Music and the Brain New York Knopf ISBN 978 1 4000 4081 0 Heaton P Hermelin B amp Pring L 1998 Autism and pitch processing A precursor for savant musical ability Music Perception 15 3 291 305 doi 10 2307 40285769 JSTOR 40285769 Frith U How Cognitive Theories Can Help Us Explain Autism Speech UC Davis Mind Institute Video available 4 5 down the list http www ucdmc ucdavis edu mindinstitute videos video autism html Archived November 4 2011 at the Wayback Machine Kupferstein H Walsh B 2014 Non Verbal Paradigm for Assessing Individuals for Absolute Pitch World Futures 72 7 8 390 405 doi 10 1080 02604027 2014 989780 S2CID 142283540 Dohn Anders Garza Villarreal Eduardo A Heaton Pamela Vuust Peter May 30 2012 Krueger Frank ed Do Musicians with Perfect Pitch Have More Autism Traits than Musicians without Perfect Pitch An Empirical Study PLOS ONE 7 5 e37961 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 737961D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0037961 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 3364198 PMID 22666425 Sakakibara A 2004 Why Are People Able to Acquire Absolute Pitch Only During Early Childhood The Japanese Journal of Educational Psychology 52 4 485 496 doi 10 5926 jjep1953 52 4 485 Chin C 2003 The Development of Absolute Pitch A Theory Concerning the Roles of Music Training at an Early Developmental Age and Individual Cognitive Style Psychology of Music 31 2 155 171 doi 10 1177 0305735603031002292 S2CID 145615433 Oura Y Eguchi K 1982 Absolute pitch training program for children Music Education Research 32 162 171 Sakakibara A 1999 A longitudinal study of a process for acquiring absolute pitch The Japanese Journal of Educational Psychology 47 19 27 doi 10 5926 jjep1953 47 1 19 Miyazaki K Ogawa Yoko 2006 Learning of absolute pitch by children Music Perception 24 1 63 doi 10 1525 mp 2006 24 1 63 Lau C K 2004 The acquisition of absolute pitch for the mainstreamed special educational needs and academically talented under Lau Chiu Kay Music Educatherapy The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 116 4 2580 Bibcode 2004ASAJ 116 2580L doi 10 1121 1 4785301 1 permanent dead link Abstract Abraham O 1901 Das absolute tonbewusstsein Sammelbande der Internationalen Musikgesellschaft 3 1 86 Full text Full text English Saffran J R amp Griepentrog G J 2001 Absolute pitch in infant auditory learning Evidence for developmental reorganization PDF Developmental Psychology 37 1 74 85 doi 10 1037 0012 1649 37 1 74 PMID 11206435 permanent dead link Meyer M 1899 Is the memory of absolute pitch capable of development by training Psychological Review 6 5 514 516 doi 10 1037 h0069034 Maryon E 1924 The Science of Tone Color PDF Boston C C Birchard amp Co Archived from the original PDF on November 6 2006 Retrieved September 5 2006 Gervain Judit Vines Bradley W Chen Lawrence M Seo Rubo J Hensch Takao K Werker Janet F Young Allan H 2013 Valproate reopens critical period learning of absolute pitch Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience 7 102 doi 10 3389 fnsys 2013 00102 PMC 3848041 PMID 24348349 Levitin D J amp Rogers S E 2005 Absolute pitch Perception coding and controversies PDF Trends in Cognitive Sciences 9 1 26 33 doi 10 1016 j tics 2004 11 007 PMID 15639438 S2CID 15346652 Archived from the original PDF on March 22 2006 Retrieved June 11 2006 Takeuchi A H amp Hulse S H 1993 Absolute pitch Psychological Bulletin 113 2 345 61 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 113 2 345 PMID 8451339 Ben Haim Moshe Shay Eitan Zohar Chajut Eran February 2014 Pitch memory and exposure effects Journal of Experimental Psychology Human Perception and Performance 40 1 24 32 doi 10 1037 a0033583 PMID 23875573 Levitin D 1994 Absolute memory for musical pitch evidence from production of learned melodies Perception amp Psychophysics 56 4 414 423 doi 10 3758 BF03206733 PMID 7984397 S2CID 17723148 Schellenberg E Glenn amp Trehub Sandra E 2003 Good pitch memory is widespread Psychological Science 14 3 262 266 doi 10 1111 1467 9280 03432 PMID 12741751 S2CID 31453643 Full text permanent dead link Blacking John 1995 Music and Historical Process in Vendaland In Reginald Byron ed Music Culture and Experience Chicago University of Chicago Press p 136 ISBN 0 226 08829 4 Saah Victoria Marvin Elizabeth West 2004 Absolute memory of learned melodies in children trained by the Suzuki violin method PDF Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition pp 736 739 Archived from the original PDF on August 10 2011 Miyazaki K 1993 Absolute pitch as an inability Identification of musical intervals in a tonal context Music Perception 11 1 55 72 doi 10 2307 40285599 JSTOR 40285599 Harris G B 1974 Categorical perception and absolute pitch Ontario University of Western Ontario Mottron Laurent Bouvet Lucie Bonnel Anna Samson Fabienne Burack Jacob A Dawson Michelle Heaton Pamela 2013 Veridical mapping in the development of exceptional autistic abilities Neuroscience amp Biobehavioral Reviews 37 2 209 228 doi 10 1016 j neubiorev 2012 11 016 ISSN 1873 7528 PMID 23219745 Perfect Pitch Autism s Rare Gift Interactive Autism Network iancommunity org Retrieved November 18 2022 Dooley K amp Deutsch D 2010 Absolute pitch correlates with high performance on musical dictation The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 128 2 890 3 Bibcode 2010ASAJ 128 890D doi 10 1121 1 3458848 PMID 20707458 S2CID 13958792 PDF Document Miyazaki K 1995 Perception of relative pitch with different references Some absolute pitch listeners can t tell musical interval names Perception amp Psychophysics 57 7 962 970 doi 10 3758 bf03205455 PMID 8532499 PDF Document Dooley K Deutsch D 2011 Absolute pitch correlates with high performance on interval naming tasks The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 130 6 4097 4104 Bibcode 2011ASAJ 130 4097D doi 10 1121 1 3652861 PMID 22225064 S2CID 2840110 PDF DocumentExternal links EditComprehensive historical bibliography of absolute pitch research 1876 present Another bibliography of absolute pitch with 300 papers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Absolute pitch amp oldid 1152021730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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