A single, common timbre space for a small set of processed guitar sounds was derived for four groups of listeners, each group comprising respectively native speakers of English, Japanese, Bengali, a language of Bangladesh, and Sinhala, a language of Sri Lanka. Members of these four groups also made ratings on 10 bipolar adjective scales for the same set of sounds, each of the four groups using anchoring adjectives taken from their native language. Whereas the two primary dimensions underlying perception of the guitar timbres was common between the four groups, the way in which directly translated adjectives were used to describe the sounds generally differed between the groups, those differences being quantified via principal components analysis. Nonetheless, the two most closely related languages, Bengali and Sinhala (both Indo-Aryan languages), showed much more semantic similarity to each other than did the Japanese language with any of the the three other languages examined.
Authors:
Martens, William L.; Giragama, Charith N. W.; Herath, Susantha; Wanasinghe, Dishna R.; Sabbir, Alam M.
Affiliations:
Multimedia Systems Lab, University of Aizu, Aizu-Wakamatsu, Fukushima-ken, Japan ; Multichannel Audio Research Laboratory, Faculty of Music, McGill University, Montreal, QB, Canada ; BCIS Lab. St. Cloud University, St. Cloud, MN(See document for exact affiliation information.)
AES Convention:
115 (October 2003)
Paper Number:
5895
Publication Date:
October 1, 2003
Subject:
Psychoacoustics, Perception, and Listening Tests
Click to purchase paper as a non-member or you can login as an AES member to see more options.
No AES members have commented on this paper yet.
To be notified of new comments on this paper you can
subscribe to this RSS feed.
Forum users should login to see additional options.
If you are not yet an AES member and have something important to say about this paper then we urge you to join the AES today and make your voice heard. You can join online today by clicking here.