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Original Articles

Perceptual Evaluation of Inter-song Similarity in Western Popular Music

, &
Pages 1-26 | Published online: 31 Mar 2011
 

Abstract

We describe and test the methodological set up for a web-based listening experiment that assesses the perception of inter-song similarity optimizing the trade-off between stimulus coverage and experimental time. The experiment used a relatively large set of stimuli of Western popular music: 78 song excerpts selected from 13 genres, involving 78 participants. The experiment used triadic comparisons of song excerpts to present the participants with a low-complexity task, and a partially balanced incomplete block design (PBIBD) to reduce the number of stimulus comparisons with the consequent possibility of extending the stimulus set. The three control variables used in the excerpt selection, genre, tempo and timbre, showed statistically significant saliency and a hierarchical degree of impact on participants' pair rankings (genre > tempo > timbre). We investigated the participants' perceptual space using a combination of numerical and analytical methods that help to reduce and represent the dimensionality of the data. We used a combination of scaling and discriminant functions to gain insight into the important factors underlying the organization of the participants' perceptual space. In the perceptual space calculated through multidimensional scaling, we used quadratic discriminant analysis to search for axes that maximized the separation of the excerpt classes. We identified three axes that were a posteriori labelled as ‘slow–fast’, ‘vocal–non-vocal’, and ‘synthetic–acoustic’. We found a high correlation between the excerpt tempo in beats per minute and the excerpt projections on the slow–fast axis. A final analysis showed that the relevance of the factors responsible for the grouping of excerpt subsets is context dependent.

Acknowledgements

This work is performed as part of a Marie Curie Early Stage Training grant (MEST-CT-2004–8201). We would like to thank J. Engel for the statistical support provided during the analysis of the data, and Dr H. Honing for the analysis suggestions and constructive criticism of the experimental method, and Janto Skowronek for the advice on quadratic discriminant analysis.

Notes

The excerpt database (converted to 192 kbps MP3 format) of the experiment can be obtained from the author, Alberto Novello, by sending a request mail to: [email protected]

The estimation of the 0.05 significance level for n W values is computed assuming a normal distribution of the W values with an expected value of 0.5 and a standard deviation of [1/ (n * 8)]1/2 (ranking three items gives four possible outcomes of W). In the case of the 10 repeated triads per participant n = 10 and the standard deviation is 0.11, in the case of the within-participant concordance per triad n = 78 and the standard deviation is 0.04.

The measure of W is related to the Friedman test statistic, which can be approximated with a Chi-squared distribution in the case of more than two judges. The significance level is then calculated from a Chi-squared distribution with two degrees of freedom, normalized by the number of participants and degrees of freedom (Kendall, 1975).

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