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Absolute Pitch Memory: Its Prevalence Among Musicians and Dependence on the Testing Context

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Specialty Psychology
Date 2013 Aug 15
PMID 23943554
Citations 3
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Abstract

Absolute pitch (AP) is widely believed to be a rare ability possessed by only a small group of gifted and special individuals (AP possessors). While AP has fascinated psychologists, neuroscientists, and musicians for more than a century, no theory can satisfactorily explain why this ability is so rare and difficult to learn. Here, we show that AP ability appears rare because of the methodological issues of the standard pitch-naming test. Specifically, the standard test unnecessarily poses a high decisional demand on AP judgments and uses a testing context that is highly inconsistent with one's musical training. These extra cognitive challenges are not central to AP memory per se and have thus led to consistent underestimation of AP ability in the population. Using the standard test, we replicated the typical findings that the accuracy for general violinists was low (12.38 %; chance level = 0 %). With identical stimuli, scoring criteria, and participants, violinists attained 25 % accuracy in a pitch verification test in which the decisional demand of AP judgment was reduced. When the testing context was increasingly similar to their musical experience, verification accuracy improved further and reached 39 %, three times higher than that for the standard test. Results were replicated with a separate group of pianists. Our findings challenge current theories about AP and suggest that the prevalence of AP among musicians has been highly underestimated in prior work. A multimodal framework is proposed to better explain AP memory.

Citing Articles

Conceptual coherence but methodological mayhem: A systematic review of absolute pitch phenotyping.

Bairnsfather J, Mosing M, Osborne M, Wilson S Behav Res Methods. 2025; 57(2):61.

PMID: 39838215 PMC: 11750914. DOI: 10.3758/s13428-024-02577-z.


Timbral cues underlie instrument-specific absolute pitch in expert oboists.

Hansen N, Reymore L PLoS One. 2024; 19(10):e0306974.

PMID: 39361623 PMC: 11449301. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0306974.


Articulatory motor planning and timbral idiosyncrasies as underlying mechanisms of instrument-specific absolute pitch in expert musicians.

Hansen N, Reymore L PLoS One. 2021; 16(2):e0247136.

PMID: 33606800 PMC: 7894932. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0247136.


A Theory of Instrument-Specific Absolute Pitch.

Reymore L, Hansen N Front Psychol. 2020; 11:560877.

PMID: 33192828 PMC: 7642881. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.560877.

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