Explore How Your Brain Processes Rapid Pitch Changes
Interactive auditory perception tester: Discover when frequency modulation stops sounding like "pitch changes" and starts sounding like "texture." This free Web Audio tool lets you investigate a fundamental property of human hearing: the transition from discrete pitch perception to timbral fusion as modulation rate increases.
What You'll Actually Hear (Refined Descriptors)
Unlike visual flicker fusion, auditory modulation doesn't fuse two pitches into one. Based on listener reports, you'll experience this perceptual progression:
- Below 4 Hz: Clear pitch glides ("2000 Hz → 2200 Hz → 2000 Hz")
- 5–30 Hz: Rhythmic "pulses" or "wobbles" of the higher note
- 30–100 Hz: Rough, buzzy, or metallic texture (sensory roughness)
💡 Note: Many listeners report the "pulsing" phase emphasizes the upper pitch of the modulation range. This asymmetry is a documented perceptual effect in FM perception research.
Why This Matters
- Music Production: Why vibrato above ~7 Hz sounds "shaky" not "expressive"; optimizing FM synthesis parameters
- Psychoacoustics: Mapping the temporal limits of pitch tracking vs. spectral analysis
- Audio Codecs: Why MP3/AAC discard rapid modulations (they're perceived as timbre, not pitch)
- Hearing Research: Individual differences in temporal resolution may correlate with auditory processing patterns
- Sound Design: Creating "pulsing" vs. "textured" effects by targeting specific modulation rates
The Science: Why Perception Shifts Around 4–5 Hz
Your auditory system uses two complementary strategies:
- Temporal coding: For slow changes (< ~10 Hz), neurons phase-lock to waveform cycles, allowing precise pitch tracking over time
- Place coding: For faster changes, the brain analyzes the spectrum (which frequencies are present) rather than tracking motion
When modulation exceeds ~4 Hz, temporal tracking can't resolve each glide. Instead of hearing bidirectional pitch motion, you perceive:
- 5–30 Hz: Pulses biased toward the higher frequency (possibly due to upward glide salience or neural adaptation)
- 30+ Hz: Sidebands interact within critical bands → beating → sensory roughness
This isn't a bug—it's efficient feature extraction. The brain prioritizes what changes matter: rhythm, timbre, and spectral shape.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do pulses seem to emphasize the higher note?
This asymmetry is reported by many listeners. Hypotheses include: (1) upward frequency glides may have stronger neural salience, (2) adaptation to the lower frequency during the down-glide, or (3) spectral centroid shifts favoring the upper bound. Research is ongoing—your observations contribute to this question.
Why don't I hear two pitches blending into one?
Because that's not how auditory perception works! Unlike vision, the ear doesn't "average" rapid pitch changes. Instead, pitch tracking yields to spectral analysis. What you're hearing—glides → pulses → roughness—is the scientifically expected result.
Is there a "correct" threshold?
No single value. Perception depends on frequency, modulation depth, listening environment, attention, and individual neurology. The value is in mapping your perceptual landscape.
Why does it sound metallic/buzzy around 30+ Hz?
Frequency modulation creates sideband frequencies. When these fall within the same critical band (~100–300 Hz wide), they interfere, causing "beating" perceived as roughness—a well-documented psychoacoustic phenomenon (Zwicker & Fastl, 2013).
Technical Implementation
- Pure Web Audio API: No plugins, no Java, no external dependencies
- Real-time FM synthesis: Low-frequency oscillator modulates carrier frequency with sample-accurate precision
- Live oscilloscope: Visualize waveform compression/expansion as pitch changes
- Glitch-free controls: Parameter changes use
setTargetAtTimefor smooth transitions - Cross-browser: Works in Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge
References
- Moore, B. C. J. (2012). An Introduction to the Psychology of Hearing. (Ch. 4: Temporal Processing)
- Plack, C. J. (2018). The Sense of Hearing. (Ch. 7: Pitch and Modulation)
- Zwicker, E., & Fastl, H. (2013). Psychoacoustics: Facts and Models. (Roughness models)
- Chowning, J. (1973). "The Synthesis of Complex Audio Spectra by Means of Frequency Modulation."
- Traube, C. (2000). "Perceptual Analysis of FM Synthesis Parameters."