Repetition pitch

The term "Repetition pitch" is not widely recognized in established academic or scientific literature across fields such as acoustics, music theory, psychoacoustics, or auditory perception. Reliable encyclopedic sources do not document "repetition pitch" as a standardized or formally defined concept.

Accurate information regarding the definition, origin, and technical characteristics of "repetition pitch" is not confirmed. It may be a misinterpretation, informal usage, or context-specific phrase rather than a formally established term.

Etymologically, the phrase could be interpreted as a combination of "repetition," meaning the recurrence of a sound or event, and "pitch," referring to the perceived frequency of a sound. In auditory contexts, repeated sounds can influence pitch perception—for example, in the perception of periodicity or in echo-related phenomena such as the "precedence effect" or "pitch from repetition" in signal processing. However, these phenomena are typically described using more precise terminology such as "periodicity pitch" or "echo delay," not "repetition pitch."

Related topics might include:

  • Periodicity pitch
  • Echo perception
  • Auditory scene analysis
  • Time-delayed auditory feedback
  • Psychoacoustics

Due to the lack of verifiable sources, "Repetition pitch" cannot be confidently described as an established concept.

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