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The human nervous system handles vast amounts of information by translating sensory stimuli into neural impulses, which the brain processes, creating thoughts expressed through language or stored as memories. The brain also synthesizes information from emotions and memories, which significantly influence thoughts and behaviors. This intricate process creates a comprehensive mental picture.
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Information enters the brain through encoding, which is the input of information into the memory system. Once sensory information is received from the environment, the brain labels or codes it. The information is then organized with similar information and connected to existing concepts. Encoding occurs through automatic processing and effortful processing.
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Mnemonic devices are cognitive tools that facilitate memory retention by linking new information to familiar patterns or organizational strategies. These techniques are beneficial for remembering complex or lengthy sets of information by simplifying and structuring them in easily retrievable ways.
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The representative heuristic describes a biased way of thinking, in which you unintentionally stereotype someone or something. For example, you may assume that your professors spend their free time reading books and engaging in intellectual conversation, because the idea of them spending their time playing volleyball or visiting an amusement park does not fit in with your stereotypes of professors.
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In psychology, concepts can be divided into two categories: natural and artificial. Natural concepts are formed through direct or indirect experiences. For example, consider the concept of snow. If you live in a place with regular snowfall, such as Essex Junction, Vermont, you know snow through direct experiences. You’ve seen it fall, touched it, shoveled it, and played in it. You recognize its texture, appearance, and even its smell. In contrast, if you live on an island like Saint...
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The human ear is not equally sensitive to all frequencies in the audible range. It may perceive sound waves with the same pressure but different frequencies as having different loudness. Moreover, the perception of sound waves depends on the health of an individual's ears, which decays with age. The health of one's ears may also be affected by regular exposure to loud noises.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Aug 4, 2025

Investigating the Effect of Visual Imagery and Learning Shape-Audio Regularities on Bouba and Kiki
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Shared mental representations underlie metaphorical sound concepts.

Victor Rosi1, Pablo Arias Sarah2,3, Olivier Houix4

  • 1Sound Perception and Design Group, STMS, Ircam - Sorbonne Université - CNRS - Ministère de la Culture, 1 Place Igor Stravinsky, 75004, Paris, France. rosivictor2@gmail.com.

Scientific Reports
|March 30, 2023
PubMed
Summary

Sound expertise shapes how musicians mentally represent sound concepts like brightness. While roughness is universally understood, brightness meaning is refined by experience, impacting auditory perception.

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Area of Science:

  • Psychoacoustics
  • Cognitive Science
  • Music Cognition

Background:

  • Expert communication in sound and music relies on metaphorical language from other senses.
  • The influence of specialized sound knowledge on the mental representation of auditory concepts is not well understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the acoustic characteristics of metaphorical sound concepts (brightness, warmth, roundness, roughness).
  • To compare these representations across sound engineers, conductors, and non-experts.
  • To determine how sound expertise influences the understanding of auditory metaphors.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized Best-Worst Scaling to rate a corpus of 520 orchestral instrument sounds.
  • Analyzed ratings from 24 participants across three expertise groups (sound engineers, conductors, non-experts).
  • Employed machine learning algorithms to define the acoustic portraits of each concept per group.

Main Results:

  • Sound engineers exhibited the highest consistency in their ratings.
  • The concept of 'roughness' was consistently understood across all groups.
  • 'Brightness' perception was dependent on expertise, suggesting its meaning is refined by specialized knowledge.
  • Distinguishing 'roundness' and 'warmth' relies on the interplay of pitch and noise characteristics.

Conclusions:

  • Sound expertise significantly refines the mental representation of metaphorical sound concepts, particularly 'brightness'.
  • While some concepts like 'roughness' are widely shared, others are shaped by domain-specific experience.
  • Understanding the acoustic features of pitch and noise is crucial for differentiating concepts like 'roundness' and 'warmth'.