Marcel Montrey

Marcel Montrey
  • McGill University

About

19
Publications
2,965
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90
Citations
Current institution
McGill University

Publications

Publications (19)
Preprint
Local features of instrument family and pitch register can influence the affect a music listener perceives and feels. We investigate the effect of those features on perceived and induced affect in response to single tones (Exp 1) and chromatic scales (Exp 2) and explore the moderating effect of individual differences. In two online experiments, par...
Article
Full-text available
In the investigation of musical features that influence musical affect, timbre has received relatively little attention. Investigating affective timbres as they vary between instrument families can lead to inconsistent results, because one instrument family can produce a wide variety of timbres. Here, we consider timbre descriptors, as fine-grained...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction In musical affect research, there is considerable discussion on the best method to represent affective response. This discussion mainly revolves around the dimensional (valence, tension arousal, energy arousal) and discrete (anger, fear, sadness, happiness, tenderness) models of affect. Here, we compared these models' ability to captur...
Preprint
Full-text available
In the investigation of musical features that influence musical affect, timbre has received relatively little attention. We studied the acoustic properties describing the timbral qualities of sound and analyzed how they predict perceived and induced affect. First, we considered the timbre of single tones played by different instruments by re-analyz...
Preprint
Full-text available
In musical affect research, there is considerable discussion on the best method to represent affective response. This discussion mainly revolves around the dimensional (valence, tension arousal, energy arousal) and discrete (anger, fear, sadness, happiness, tenderness) models of affect. Here, we compared these models’ ability to capture self-report...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
One source of academic discourse is what model or method best represents the affective response to music. Here, we compare the two main affect models, dimensional (valence, tension arousal, and energy arousal) and discrete (anger, fear, sadness, happiness, and tenderness), as a method for capturing the self-reported affective response to affectivel...
Article
Timbre provides an important cue to identify musical instruments. Many timbral attributes covary with other parameters like pitch. This study explores listeners' ability to construct categories of instrumental sound sources from sounds that vary in pitch. Nonmusicians identified 11 instruments from the woodwind, brass, percussion, and plucked and b...
Article
Full-text available
Surprisingly little is known about how social groups influence social learning. Although several studies have shown that people prefer to copy in-group members, these studies have failed to resolve whether group membership genuinely affects who is copied or whether group membership merely correlates with other known factors, such as similarity and...
Article
Full-text available
Timbre perception and auditory grouping principles can provide a theoretical basis for aspects of orchestration. In Experiment 1, 36 excerpts contained two streams and 12 contained one stream as determined by music analysts. Streams—the perceptual connecting of successive events—comprised either single instruments or blended combinations of instrum...
Preprint
Full-text available
A defining feature of human culture is that knowledge and technology continually improve over time. Such cumulative cultural evolution (CCE) probably depends far more heavily on how reliably information is preserved than on how efficiently it is refined. Therefore, one possible reason that CCE appears diminished or absent in other species is that i...
Article
Full-text available
A defining feature of human culture is that knowledge and technology continually improve over time. Such cumulative cultural evolution (CCE) probably depends far more heavily on how reliably information is preserved than on how efficiently it is refined. Therefore, one possible reason that CCE appears diminished or absent in other species is that i...
Preprint
Full-text available
Ingroup favoritism, the tendency to favor ingroup over outgroup, is often explained as a product of intergroup conflict, or correlations between group tags and behavior. Such accounts assume that group membership is meaningful, whereas human data show that ingroup favoritism occurs even when it confers no advantage and groups are transparently arbi...
Article
Full-text available
There is a general consensus among archaeologists that replacement of Neanderthals by anatomically modern humans in Europe occurred around 40-35 ka. However, the causal mechanism for this replacement continues to be debated. Proposed models have featured either fitness advantages in favour of anatomically modern humans or invoked neutral drift unde...
Preprint
Full-text available
There is a general consensus among archaeologists that replacement of Neanderthals by anatomically modern humans in Europe occurred around 40K to 35K YBP. However, the causal mechanism for this replacement continues to be debated. Searching for specific fitness advantages in the archaeological record has proven difficult, as these may be obscured,...
Article
Full-text available
We apply three plausible algorithms in agent-based computer simulations to recent experiments on social learning in wild birds. Although some of the phenomena are simulated by all three learning algorithms, several manifestations of social conformity bias are simulated by only the approximate majority (AM) algorithm, which has roots in chemistry, m...
Article
Culture is considered an evolutionary adaptation that enhances reproductive fitness. A common explanation is that social learning, the learning mechanism underlying cultural transmission, enhances mean fitness by avoiding the costs of individual learning. This explanation was famously contradicted by Rogers (1988), who used a simple mathematical mo...
Article
Full-text available
We introduce a framework within evolutionary game theory for studying the distinction between objective and subjective rationality and apply it to the evolution of cooperation on 3-regular random graphs. In our simulations, agents evolve misrepresentations of objective reality that help them cooperate and maintain higher social welfare in the Priso...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
We study three types of learning with Bayesian agent-based modeling. First, we show that previous results obtained from learning chains can be generalized to a more realistic lattice world involving multiple social interactions. Learning based on the passing of posterior probabilities converges to the truth more quickly and reliably than does learn...

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