Perceiving Action Identity - How Pianists Recognize Their Own Performances

Number 1353
Year 2004
Drawer 25
Entry Date 01/31/2008
Authors Repp, B.H, & Knoblich, G.
Contact
Publication American Psychological Society, V. 15: No. 9, pp. 604-609.
url http://www.haskins.yale.edu/Reprints/HL1353.pdf
Abstract Can skilled performers, such as artists or athletes, recognize the products of their own actions? We recorded 12 pianists playing 12 mostly unfamiliar musical excerpts, half of them on a silent keyboard. Several months later, we played these performances back and asked the pianists to use a 5-point scale to rate whether they thought they were the person playing each excerpt (1 = no, 5 = yes). They gave their own performances significantly higher ratings than any other pianist’s performances. In two later follow-up tests, we presented edited performances from which differences in tempo, overall dynamic (i.e., intensity) level, and dynamic nuances had been removed. The pianists’ ratings did not change significantly, which suggests that the remaining information (expressive timing and articulation) was sufficient for self-recognition. Absence of sound during recording had no significant effect. These results are best explained by the hypothesis that an observer’s action system is most strongly activated during perception of self-produced actions.
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