Are You Your Own Best Judge? On the Self-Evaluation of Singing

J Voice. 2023 Jul;37(4):633.e7-633.e14. doi: 10.1016/j.jvoice.2021.03.028. Epub 2021 May 16.

Abstract

Objective: Singers are the first judges of their own performances. Although performers usually share a precise definition of pitch accuracy, do they correctly estimate their own ability to sing in tune? This study examines the accuracy of professional singers' self-evaluations and investigates the profiles of performers/judges.

Methods: Eighteen highly trained soprano singers were invited to evaluate the pitch accuracy of peers' performances, selected from an existing corpus, and their own previously recorded performances in a pairwise comparison paradigm. The statistical model derived from the participants' evaluation of their peers allowed us to estimate the pitch accuracy of participants' own performances and served as a reference to quantify participants' evaluation and self-evaluation abilities.

Results: The results show that participants were surprisingly inaccurate when evaluating themselves. Specifically, most participants overestimated the accuracy of their own performances. Also, we observed a relationship between singing proficiency and self-evaluation ability, as well as the presence of different profiles.

Conclusion: In addition to emphasizing that singers are not necessarily their own best judges, this study suggests potential role(s) for self-evaluation (in)accuracy in the development of exceptional skills.

Keywords: Pitch accuracy—Music evaluation—Classical singers—Illusory superiority.

MeSH terms

  • Diagnostic Self Evaluation
  • Humans
  • Music*
  • Pitch Perception
  • Singing*
  • Voice Quality