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Charles Delbé

Researcher at University of Burgundy

Publications -  18
Citations -  266

Charles Delbé is an academic researcher from University of Burgundy. The author has contributed to research in topics: Melody & Music psychology. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 18 publications receiving 231 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles Delbé include Pasteur Institute & University of Lyon.

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A combined model of sensory and cognitive representations underlying tonal expectations in music: from audio signals to behavior.

TL;DR: It is shown that in tonal space, melodies are grouped by their tonal rather than timbral properties, whereas the reverse is true for the periodicity pitch representation.
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Empirical evidence for musical syntax processing? Computer simulations reveal the contribution of auditory short-term memory.

TL;DR: Simulation of empirical studies that investigated the processing of harmonic structures revealed that most of the musical syntax manipulations used with behavioral and neurophysiological methods as well as with developmental and cross-cultural approaches can be accounted for by the auditory memory model, leading to question whether current research on musical syntax can really be compared with linguistic processing.
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Priming in melody perception: Tracking down the strength of cognitive expectations

TL;DR: The tonal priming effect observed here provides strong evidence for the influence of listeners' tonal knowledge on music processing and points out the need for controlled musical material to study cognitive components in music perception.
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Categorization of extremely brief auditory stimuli: domain-specific or domain-general processes?

TL;DR: The present study investigated the minimum amount of auditory stimulation that allows differentiation of spoken voices, instrumental music, and environmental sounds and suggested that the categorization of extremely brief auditory stimuli depends on the variability of their spectral envelope in the used set.
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Use of ultrasonic vocalizations to assess olfactory detection in mouse pups treated with 3-methylindole

TL;DR: A toxin known to damage the olfactory epithelium in adult, the 3-methylindole, impairs the ultrasonic call responses triggered by exposure to male bedding, thus confirming the efficiency of this olfactotoxin on mice pups.