[pianotech] Perfect Pitch / Children

Richard Brekne ricb at pianostemmer.no
Sat Mar 21 02:58:52 PDT 2009


Its not quite as simple as that. Some folks may have a very sensitive 
pitch sense with relation to A, but get way off in judging other notes. 
I ran into a study once a while back that seemed to point in the 
direction that some notes were typically way off for folks even with the 
best so called pitch sensitivity.

I'm convinced at this point that its a kind of learned behavior that 
either you have some real, perceived or imposed in some sense or another 
need for as a very young child, or you don't. There are even reported 
cases of folks who've had <<perfect pitch>> and then "lost" it for some 
reason or another. No explanation given.

Most studies that are easy to find are really superficial and confirm 
that an individual can identify a given note for what it is.  Studies 
that pick the concept apart and try to define its real limits are not so 
easy to come by. But it doesn't take much reasoning to understand that 
the obvious variances in pitch through time and around the world, not to 
mention temperament questions or other such issues cloud the 
absoluteness of the concept quite a bit.

Cheers
RicB


    I've wondered for quite some time about the limits of so-called
    perfect pitch. I've tried to research this on the internet and not
    gotten very far in the past. Can individuals with a high degree of
    this ability discriminate between 440 and 440.5? I imagine this has
    been researched, and it would be really interesting to know how
    refined this ability can be.





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