Experience the Paradox
Try Different Pairs
Each pair is separated by exactly half an octave (tritone):
Your perception compared to others:
About half of listeners hear it going up, half hear it going down!
What's Happening?
A tritone is an interval of exactly half an octave—the most ambiguous distance in music. It's so dissonant it was called "diabolus in musica" (the devil in music) in medieval times.
When you hear two tones separated by a tritone, your brain must decide: is the second tone the higher or lower version? There's no acoustic answer—it's equally both.
(no octave info)
These "Shepard tones" remove octave information, leaving only pitch class.
Why Do People Hear It Differently?
It's Not Random—It's Learned
Your perception correlates strongly with:
- The language you grew up speaking
- The geographical region of your childhood
- The pitch range of voices you heard most
Regional Tendencies
California, USA
Tend to hear C-F# as descending
↓ F# is lowerSouthern England
Tend to hear C-F# as ascending
↑ F# is higherVietnam
Tonal language speakers show distinct patterns
↑ Varies by dialectChina (Mandarin)
Perception influenced by tonal speech
↓ Complex patternsDiana Deutsch discovered that the pitch class you hear as "higher" forms a consistent pattern for each listener, rotating around the circle.
The Science Behind It
Shepard Tones
The tones used in this paradox are called Shepard tones—named after Roger Shepard who invented them. Each "note" is actually multiple octaves played simultaneously with a bell-curve amplitude envelope.
This removes octave information, leaving only pitch class (which note, ignoring which octave). C4 and C5 become just "C".
The Brain's "Pitch Height Template"
Your brain has an internal template mapping pitch classes to perceived height. This template—shaped by early language exposure—determines whether F# feels "higher" or "lower" than C. The template is stable within individuals but varies between them.
What This Means
Perception is Constructed
Even something as basic as "higher vs lower pitch" isn't objective reality—it's an interpretation shaped by experience. Two people can hear the exact same sound as opposite directions.
Language Shapes Hearing
The prosody (melody) of your native language literally rewires how you perceive music. Tonal language speakers show different patterns than non-tonal language speakers.
We Assume Agreement
Before this paradox was discovered in 1986, no one imagined that "pitch goes up" could mean different things to different people. How many other "obvious" perceptions are we assuming?
Ambiguity is Resolved by Priors
When sensory data is ambiguous (as all data is, to some degree), the brain fills in gaps using learned expectations. The tritone is just an extreme case of what always happens.
The Deep Insight
The tritone paradox proves that there is no "neutral" perception. Every act of hearing, seeing, or sensing is an interpretation filtered through a lifetime of experience.
"The tritone paradox is a wonderful example of how the same physical stimulus can be perceived in opposite ways, depending on who is doing the perceiving." — Diana Deutsch