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The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 127, 1 (2010) 513-524
Perceptual studies of violin body damping and vibrato
Claudia Fritz 1, Jim Woodhouse 2, Felicia P-H. Cheng 2, Ian Cross 3, Alan F. Blackwell 4, Brian C. J. Moore 5
(05/01/2010)

This work explored how the perception of violin notes is influenced by the magnitude of the applied vibrato and by the level of damping of the violin resonance modes. Damping influences the “peakiness” of the frequency response, and vibrato interacts with this peakiness by producing fluctuations in spectral content as well as in frequency and amplitude. Initially, it was shown that thresholds for detecting a change in vibrato amplitude were independent of body damping, and thresholds for detecting a change in body damping were independent of vibrato amplitude. A study of perceptual similarity using triadic comparison showed that vibrato amplitude and damping were largely perceived as independent dimensions. A series of listening tests was conducted employing synthesized, recorded or live performance to probe perceptual responses in terms of “liveliness” and preference. The results do not support the conclusion that “liveliness” results from the combination of the use of vibrato and a “peaky” violin response. Judgments based on listening to single notes showed inconsistent patterns for liveliness, while preferences were highest for damping that was slightly less than for a reference (real) violin. In contrast, judgments by players based on many notes showed preference for damping close to the reference value.
1 :  Institut Jean Le Rond d'Alembert (IJLRA)
CNRS : UMR7190 – Université Paris VI - Pierre et Marie Curie
2 :  University of Cambridge, Department of Engineering (CUED)
University of Cambridge
3 :  University of Cambridge, Music Faculty
University of Cambridge
4 :  University of Cambridge, Computer Laboratory
University of Cambridge
5 :  University of Cambridge, Department of Experimental Psychology
University of Cambridge
Institut Jean le Rond d'Alembert, Université Pierre et Marie Curie ; Université de Cambridge
Sciences de l'ingénieur/Acoustique

Physique/Mécanique/Acoustique
acoustic resonance – damping – hearing – musical acoustics – musical instruments
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