Meaning From Environmental Sounds: Types of Signal–Referent Relations
and Their Effect on Recognizing Auditory Icons
Peter Keller and Catherine Stevens
University of Western Sydney
This article addresses the learnability of auditory icons, that is, environmental sounds that refer either
directly or indirectly to meaningful events. Direct relations use the sound made by the target event
whereas indirect relations substitute a surrogate for the target. Across 3 experiments, different indirect
relations (ecological, in which target and surrogate coexist in the world; metaphorical, in which target and
surrogate have similar appearance or function, and random) were compared with one another and with
direct relations on measures including associative strength ratings, amount of exposure required for
learning, and response times for recognizing icons. Findings suggest that performance is best with direct
relations, worst with random relations, and that ecological and metaphorical relations involve distinct
types of association but do not differ in learnability
FULL TEXT
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied Copyright 2004 by the American Psychological Association, Inc.
2004, Vol. 10, No. 1, 3–12 1076-898X/04/$12.00 DOI: 10.1037/1076-898X.10.1.3
A collection of resources to use as a starting point or inspiration of you are stuck for ideas when working on your dissertation and EXP.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Queer Feminist Punk: An anti-social history
Maria Katharina Wiedlack (2015). Queer-Feminist Punk An Anti-Social History . Wien Zaglossus. Link to Book
-
Pop goes the rapper: a close reading of Eminem’s genderphobia VINCENT STEPHENS Abstract "This article argues that controversial h...
-
Found Footage Magazine is an online publication dealing with archival film. An article on sampling and found footage from Scope Journal
-
How immigration shaped jazz How music crosses American borders
No comments:
Post a Comment