Empirical Musicology Review (Jul 2016)

Expectancy-Violation and Information-Theoretic Models of Melodic Complexity

  • Tuomas Eerola

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18061/emr.v11i1.4836
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 2 – 17

Abstract

Read online

The present study assesses two types of models for melodic complexity: one based on expectancy violations and the other one related to an information-theoretic account of redundancy in music. Seven different datasets spanning artificial sequences, folk and pop songs were used to refine and assess the models. The refinement eliminated unnecessary components from both types of models. The final analysis pitted three variants of the two model types against each other and could explain from 46-74% of the variance in the ratings across the datasets. The most parsimonious models were identified with an information-theoretic criterion. This suggested that the simplified expectancy-violation models were the most efficient for these sets of data. However, the differences between all optimized models were subtle in terms both of performance and simplicity.

Keywords