1. Introduction
In the field of musical acoustics, the investigation of the relationship between geometrical properties and perceived sound is one of the most challenging tasks. However, its importance cannot be questioned, as it is only once the relation to perception has been uncovered that practitioners of the musical instrument making craft may draw practically applicable conclusions from a scientist’s results. This article focuses on a single geometrical parameter of the violin—back arch height—and presents a series of investigations into its relation to perceptual outcomes. As such, only a small facet of a larger field can be hoped to be uncovered, contributing incrementally to the broader understanding of violin acoustic function. This study provides violin makers with practical advice that can be applied directly in their workshops. For researchers, methodologies for perceptual test design and inconsistencies in the status quo of acoustics research are discussed.
A body of literature has concerned itself with the connection between the physical properties of violins and their perceived sound. One factor often commented on by players is that of ageing. Many believe that a newly made violin first needs to mature and develop its sound. Inta et al. explored this phenomenon by comparing two violins [
1]. One was played rarely and kept under controlled environmental conditions, while the other was regularly played by a professional violinist. At the onset of the experiment and again after three years, playing and listening tests were conducted. Ultimately, the study found no significant difference in preference between the two violins.
Another firmly held belief among many is that the old Italian instruments are superior [
2]. In 2008, Bissinger categorized instruments into groups of “bad”, “good” and “excellent” violins and rated the old Italian instruments at his disposal as “excellent” [
3]. For these, detailed CT scans were available. No firm conclusions about the relationship between geometry and sound quality could be drawn. Examining the influence of the model on perceived sound, Fritz et al. conducted experiments in 2016 [
4]. In a free sorting task, nine violins, two of them originals by Antonio Stradivari and one by Guarneri del Gesu, the rest modern copies, were evaluated by 21 violinists. While participants sorted the three del Gesu instruments in a group, the Stradivari models were not grouped together. No firm conclusions about the influence of the model on perceived sound output could be drawn.
The influence of strings and soundpost height were investigated by Fu in 2020 [
5]. Furthermore, student- and performance-level instruments were compared in a series of perceptual tests. In general, the experiments faced large problems of inter-individual variability. When scrutinizing small physical changes such as changing soundpost height by a few tenths of a millimeter, these problems threaten to mask the actual signal that one is trying to detect. In 2019, Fritz et al. reported similar difficulties while trying to find the correlates of perceptual outcomes and construction parameters for a set of 25 violas [
6].
More recently, in 2022, Nastac et al. reported on the outcomes of perceptual tests, conducted on a set of seven violins [
7]. The instruments differed in terms of their plate thickness. It was found that instruments with thicker plates as compared to the chosen reference profile were preferred overall. Outside of the world of violins, similar methodology has been applied to the investigation of the steel-string guitar [
8]. Here, the influence of bracewood and soundboard material properties on perceived sound was explored. The examined variables were density and Young’s modulus. In a listening test using pairwise comparisons for preference ratings, low density and Young’s modulus resulted in higher preference ratings. In a recent PhD thesis, Castrillo performed perceptual tests with string instrument bows [
9]. It was found that players perceive changes in the mass distribution and adjust their playing accordingly.
For every perceptual test, appropriate stimuli are necessary. In the present case, six instruments were constructed experimentally using modern techniques (e.g., CNC machining and 3-D scanning) to best represent the theoretical case of changing back arch height on a single instrument without changing anything else. Similar methodology was applied previously by Fritz et al., in the so-called Bilbao Project [
10], and Nastac et al. [
7]. Only very limited research has concerned itself directly with acoustic outcomes of changing back arch height, and none has discussed perceptual outcomes [
11,
12]. As such, the presented investigation gives an initial insight into this parameter’s influence on the instrument’s perceived sound output.
The original research question was two-fold: Can participants distinguish between violins of different arch heights, and if so, how do they conceptualize the perceived differences? As such, the investigation was initially designed to test if participants could discriminate between different arch height violins in blind conditions and only then analyse their verbal descriptions of the differences they perceived. After a first test in the playing situation, it was decided to specify the test parameters further to allow participants to focus on individual properties of sound, in theory enabling higher task sensitivity. Therefore, relatively simple two-alternative forced choice (2AFC) protocols were implemented, in both live and headphone-based environments. Results provide a basis for arranging the six test instruments relative to each other in the perceptual domain. The test design was duplicated to ascertain if qualitatively similar outcomes would be observed in multiple independent instances.
Section 2 will present the test instruments.
Section 3 details the applied method and obtained results for the first experiment, a free sorting task in the playing situation.
Section 4 does the same for the self-experiment. In
Section 5, the methodology of a live listening test and obtained results are discussed.
Section 6 reviews the method and results of the online listening test using live recordings as stimuli.
Section 7 does the same for the online listening test using stimuli obtained from hybrid synthesis. The content of these sections will then be discussed and summarized in
Section 8.
8. Conclusions
To evaluate the influence of back arch height changes on violin sound perception, six test instruments were constructed that represent the theoretical case of changing back arch height on a given violin, leaving all else untouched, as well as possible. Before discussing the individual perceptual tests, it is important to acknowledge that the measurements obtained in this study are relative, and individual differences in sound perception may influence the results. Furthermore, the room acoustics of the available spaces shape perceptual outcomes. The presented findings should be considered in this context and may not be generalizable to the broader population and independent of room acoustics.
In a first perceptual test, which was designed as a free sorting task in the playing situation, no discrimination by arch height could be observed. Some aspects of test design could be thought to explain this observation. The playing test did not restrict the musicians to evaluate a specific excerpt or semantic descriptor. While this prevents the experimenter’s preconceived notions to influence the test results, it may also lead to large inter-individual variability. Additionally, when evaluating all aspects of a given violin’s sound, one may miss a rather subtle difference in a specific area.
Using the principal author as a participant, a self-experiment was conducted to test if there was indeed a perceivable difference between the test instruments under specific conditions. Over the course of 27 individual trials, it could be clearly shown that the principal author was in fact able to—on average—sort the instruments by arch height. While this result cannot be used on its own, showing that one person could discriminate the instruments by arch height provides a basis for the assumption that under the right circumstances, others might be able to do so as well.
Testing this hypothesis, two perceptual tests following a 2AFC protocol in live and headphone-based listening situations were conducted. Totals of 15 and 26 participants, respectively, judged the instruments in pairwise comparisons in regard to the perceived “warmth/roundness” of sound. Both results were in qualitative agreement with each other and those from the self-experiment. While each of these on their own is hard to interpret due to relatively large standard error (see
Figure 9 and
Figure 11 and
Table 4 and
Table 5), their qualitative agreement provides some confidence in their common conclusions. Since, on average, the medium-arch height instruments were rated the lowest for “warmth/roundness” of sound, with the low- and high-arch height instruments achieving similar, much higher scores, a non-linear dependency on back arch height is suggested.
Two conclusions immediately useful to the violin maker may be drawn: when considering changing back arch height on a given model, the most significant expected change in sound perception is linked to the “warmth/roundness” of sound, and there may exist a turning point, where, e.g., further increasing arch height reverses its effect on sound. A third conclusion can be drawn from the circumstantial data of all the conducted trials. In none of the cases did participants rate the difficulty of presented tasks especially low, and none of the outcomes were entirely clear, indicating immediately noticeable and obvious differences between instruments. Since, in the workshop, more commonly, much smaller changes in back arch height than the to mm explored here are considered, this gives a much needed frame of reference. Based on the results presented here, a change in back arch height by, e.g., 0.3 mm, as may be practically necessary when working with limited back blank thickness, can be regarded as having no noticeable effects on perceived sound with some confidence.
Finally, another headphone-based listening test was conducted, in order to test the usefulness of the hybrid synthesis method for purposes such as those of the presented investigation. A total of 19 participants, most of which had participated in the first headphone-based listening test, rated the instruments in the same way as before. The only difference in the test setup was the stimuli, which had been synthesized from radiation measurements. These were conducted in the free–free boundary condition using a single microphone position and horizontal excitation. The outcomes of this procedure did not agree with any of the results of the other perceptual tests, leading to no clear applicability of the hybrid synthesis method for the purposes of this investigation. However, some clear shortcomings of the procedure as applied here, which are not intrinsic to the hybrid synthesis method and could well explain the presented results, need to be kept in mind. First, a single microphone position in nearly anechoic conditions does not represent the actual reverberant conditions of the listening tests used for comparison here well. Second, the free–free boundary condition of the radiation measurement affects the vibratory behaviour of the violin in a clearly different way than the boundary condition in the playing position as encountered in the listening tests. Third, simple horizontal excitation using an impact hammer might not sufficiently represent complex excitation by the bow.
Keeping all of these shortcomings in mind, no generalized conclusions about the usefulness of the hybrid synthesis method as a whole may be drawn from the presented data. Rather, it can be concluded that simplified methodology as applied here may not be sufficient to produce useful stimuli using convolution. To allow researchers to estimate the usefulness of this method for their work, more useful data input needs to be used for hybrid synthesis. For this, as alluded to before, measurements would need to be conducted in as close to the same acoustic situation as encountered during listening. The microphone would need to be placed in the listener’s position in the same space (e.g., a concert hall) as used for the listening test. The musician would then be situated on the stage, holding the instrument in the same position as during playing. Now, the violin would simply need to be excited for a transfer function, representing as closely as possible the same circumstances as during the listening test, to be gathered. For this, an impact hammer could be mounted to the chinrest of the instrument, exciting the bridge at the bass side corner. Some preliminary tests of this procedure have been performed and delivered promising results for future investigations.