They all resonate at the same pitch, yet produce a constant, layered dissonance due to the room's inconsistent acoustics. |
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For this reason, power chords are often used when using fuzzboxes to reduce dissonance. |
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Cultural dissonance oftentimes manifests itself in different lifestyles and preferences. |
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He twists and turns in his efforts to get away from the cacophonous dissonance, and then untwists himself to get out of his sheets. |
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His moments of desperate frustration lend realistic dissonance to their relationship. |
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I am the child of their ancestral dissonance with all its contrariness and overlappings. |
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This leaves the orchestra without a conductor, and a musical cacophony verging on dissonance. |
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Havana is a city of architectural ironies and paradoxes, of harmony and dissonance. |
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Penrose's device offers a way for anyone to see the harmony and dissonance that musicians can readily hear. |
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I regret that I have to strike a little note of dissonance in this otherwise unanimous debate. |
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Morrison and MacLachlan play their dissonance not for guffaws but for rather rueful observational comedy. |
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Yet it might end up in increasing political dissonance between continental Europe on one side and England and the US on the other. |
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Due to the volatility of the situation, managers tend to withdraw power from the working levels lest local autonomy causes dissonance. |
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The echoes that the harsh dissonance produced were cut short with the ongoing volume. |
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I really like watching his HK films with that dissonance in mind, looking for the different ways Chinese culture expects stories to be told. |
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Karim is supposed to embody the dissonance and non-conformity of second-generation Bangladeshi youths. |
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Grimaud's ability to evoke both sensitive tonal shadings and clangorous dissonance made this movement an overwhelming experience. |
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There is dissonance, beautiful dissonance, mixed with more diatonic harmony. |
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The music's density is intriguing, its rhythmic energy is compelling, and its harmonic complexity and dissonance is unusual for Reich. |
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Actually, this is a whole lot like what I just described in terms of cognitive dissonance and syncretic religions. |
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That kind of cognitive dissonance will really screw you up, and it will manifest in many more ways than just loss of attraction. |
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There's cognitive dissonance between our professed support for meritocracy and our behaviour when our own children are involved. |
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Around the turn of the century, composers began to experiment with atonality, dissonance and primitive rhythms. |
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They keep these worlds separate and tend to compartmentalize any dissonance they might feel. |
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In 1913 Paris was hit by The Rite of Spring and by a volume of noise and dissonance that no human had experienced outside the field of battle. |
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This study used mild emotional stimuli, those associated with people's reactions to musical consonance versus dissonance. |
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The idiom is essentially tonal though dissonance, bitonality, and, occasionally, polytonality are liberally used. |
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But the dissonance between gift and exchange economies helps explain why the Hopis did not achieve their goals. |
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To the guitar riffs he said nothing, letting the ear splitting dissonance of the whammy bar do all the talking for him. |
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These subversive narratives were not the solution I sought to the dissonance between my expected and actual college experience. |
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Much of its punch derives from new-minted, surprising chord progressions and pungent dissonance, an idiom Barber carries to the end of the setting. |
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His dictionary hints at moments of cultural syncretism and dissonance, and, of course, varying degrees of onomatopoetic accuracy. |
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From then on the pileup of dissonance in Schoenberg's music became so pronounced as to make the concept of dissonance itself meaningless. |
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She is small and blond and snub-nosed, but she knows how to smolder icily and this dissonance is what makes her special. |
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The formal dissonance in Gauguin's paintings was the engine of his seductiveness, and it blazed a trail for modern art. |
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Mr Trecartin's videos effectively create more dissonance here than they did amid the wannabe edginess of the New Museum. |
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One cause of this dissonance has been that the conservative movement was much more successful at reshaping the economy than remaking society. |
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This can be loss of physical balance, a rollercoaster ride or cognitive dissonance. |
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For many, his compositions came across as volcanic outbursts of dissonance and chromaticism, with outrageous bass notes and rapid-fire rhythms. |
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There is some serious cognitive dissonance going on here that is personally and professionally disturbing. |
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There is also a logical dissonance in the government's decision to cut this down. |
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They act as a coordinating instrument, but also as constraint, blockage, agent of cognitive dissonance. |
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The NPHP investigated possible strategies to address the dissonance between mainstream and Indigenous community concepts. |
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We must project Europe's voice with the unity of a choir singing from the same hymn sheet, rather than the dissonance of an unruly cacophony. |
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Moreover, frequently there is a dissonance between institutional policies and discourse and actual practices. |
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This sometimes caused unnecessary and unhelpful dissonance in EU external action. |
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A kind of cognitive dissonance must have begun to emerge among the North Korean population. |
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In turn, this ultimately creates a greater degree of dissonance within the subculture. |
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A free and open forum rather than a climate of dissonance must be fostered to prevent bottlenecks in the critical flow of information. |
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Don't you see a dissonance between non-punitive reporting and the request to ensure that you have enforcement mechanisms in place? |
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It is interesting that women and men share these views, this dissonance between notions of femininity and competence. |
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There is an apparent dissonance or disjunction in her work, but this comes from a novel meshing of seemingly discontinuous or unconnected themes and problems. |
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The cognitive dissonance inherent in this belief system makes it far less likely for a student to pursue the sciences for personal, family and community reasons. |
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In universities, disagreement and cognitive dissonance are not to be feared but, rather, to be recognized as way stations toward greater understanding. |
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Does this cognitive dissonance signal an underlying problem in my psyche? |
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It's another example of how Ives associated dissonance and technical demands with masculinity, overcoming challenges, and prowess on the baseball field. |
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The first of these is the pedal, typically a sustaining or reiteration of a note in the bass while harmonies change above it, creating dissonance with the bass in the process. |
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Abandoning the preconceived notions of tonality, and immersed within a musical state of dissonance, Coltrane's music became a communicative attempt at reaching a higher plane. |
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He employs a wide variety of tonal registers and often emphasizes dissonance or euphony in particular verses by varying the intensity of speed and volume while reading. |
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But when the school holds a ceremony honoring the soldiers who killed her Arab brethren, she suffers clear cognitive dissonance. |
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For an organization that extols trustworthiness, these files lay bare an appalling dissonance. |
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The darkness and dissonance of these tightly constructed tales reflect something of the political turbulence of Soviet Russia. |
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There was no camp, kitsch, or dissonance to his pure love of Michael Jackson. |
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A big part of the reason is a simple psychological phenomenon called cognitive dissonance. |
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But when she takes on the rock scene, she manages to catch all the sociological dissonance and subtle countermelodies. |
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There is definitely a dissonance in the global discourse about rights. |
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The fourth point to which the Fisheries Committee would like to draw your attention is the implications of the dissonance which sometimes exists between bird and fish stocks. |
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Perhaps in response to the growing cognitive dissonance, the North Korean entertainment industry has begun to address new themes: divorce, love triangles, the double and triple shifts of women. |
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The tonalities of major and minor as means for managing dissonance and chromaticism in music took full shape. |
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Then he went off into his own updated, posteverything style, full of explicit dissonance, repetition and strange dynamics. |
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His approach was to move all the voices in a homorhythmic manner with no complicated rhythms, and to use dissonance very conservatively. |
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Nowhere is the dissonance between principle and practice more pronounced than among those in the breach, particularly African-Americans. |
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Yet there is a uncomfortable dissonance between Mr Buffett's claims to have created a firm that will outlast him and the adulation that will be on full display in Omaha, Nebraska, this weekend. |
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How exactly the dissonance in the rules of visas for Canadian and Russian citizens will be resolved we will see during the forthcoming bilateral consultations with Canadian diplomats. |
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I tried to define the essence of the brand and the shape to represent it in order to promote its inherent and distinctive values of high quality and dissonance. |
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Their success turns on their underlying cognitive dissonance, their provocativeness, and their ability to tap into sensation. |
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Try to live with it all, hounded by the dissonance of his contradictions? |
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Cognitive dissonance is considered to be an aversive state that triggers mechanisms to bring cognitions back into a consistent relationship with one another. |
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That dissonance between a newcomer's sense of themselves and the outside world's perception fascinated me as a young adult, and later as a journalist. |
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Consonance and dissonance are relative terms, and to say that consonance constitutes pleasing sounds and dissonance displeasing sounds is to beg the question. |
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This tactic helps avoid any potential cognitive dissonance on the buyer's part. |
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Melodies and rhythms performed by his traditional Arab Takht group go off at a tangent, grate with dissonance or are reunited to glorious harmony. |
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The Court also indicated that the old approach led to inconsistent outcomes, legitimized systemic discrimination, and created a dissonance between human rights legislation and the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. |
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The climate of dissonance that had been allowed to develop between some of the controllers in the East and North specialties contributed to the lack of communication. |
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Those broken lines, those sharply contrasting ways in which the metal is treated in one and the same work produce an impression of variety, never of dissonance. |
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We were careful to acknowledge that information about the effects of regulatory dissonance upon actual costs is at best fragmentary, and often anecdotal. |
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There is a dissonance between what she is saying and the way she is saying it, almost as though the only way she can get the sentences out is to be as calm and matter-of-fact as possible. |
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At the end of another week of cognitive dissonance for the richest, loudest, most chasteningly brittle league in the world, there must be a few more interesting conversations to be had. |
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Why has cognitive dissonance not overtaken the author of this piece, Tom Roberts? |
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The sensation of cognitive dissonance can produce much anxiety for college students. |
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Cognitive dissonance is defined as the confused mental condition that results from holding incompatible beliefs simultaneously. |
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If anything, such cognitive dissonance is even scarier than outright support for terrorism. |
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That brooding sense of culpability contrasts against the garage rock soundscape, creating a dissonance that's engrossing. |
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Ever since dissonance made its appearance on the musical scene, each contemporary composer must ask himself the question of how music can be sustained in a tri-dimentional continuum of time and space. |
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Despite significant increases in financial investments, there is a dissonance between the resources being made available and progress made on the ground. |
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She said that the breathing and posturing activate the parasympathetic nervous system and reduce emotional chaos and cognitive dissonance. |
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Instead, in a more Brechtian key, we are left stranded in catastasis, and Bernard Shaw and Totalitarianism forgoes anodyne closure in favor of sustained dissonance. |
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Further work will address the subtleties of cognitive dissonance and other psychological phenomena across East Asian cultures, Heine and Lehman say. |
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In the end, Catan's lyrical, neoimpressionist style, which incorporates some dissonance, light Latin rhythms, and unique instrumentation, is recognizably distinct. |
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The therapist's key task at this stage is to create cognitive dissonance. |
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