The pitch of the fly’s buzzing doesn’t change, for instance.
In situations where subjective experience of time is changed, do people actually perceive a difference in pitch? If not, maybe rather than being sensitive to each vibration, we’re only sensitive to the (real-time) frequency of vibration? We don’t hear individual vibrations in a constant tone; the tone sounds constant.
In situations where subjective experience of time is changed, do people actually perceive a difference in pitch? If not, maybe rather than being sensitive to each vibration, we’re only sensitive to the (real-time) frequency of vibration? We don’t hear individual vibrations in a constant tone; the tone sounds constant.
Idk but in theory they shouldn’t, as pitch is sensed by the hairs on the section of the cochlea that resonates at that the relevant frequency.