What we see may influence what we hear with music, as well.
See below.
CA

Sight over sound in the judgment of music performance
Chia-Jung Tsay
Abstract
Social judgments are made on the basis of both visual and auditory
information, with consequential implications for our decisions. To examine
the impact of visual information on expert judgment and its predictive
validity for performance outcomes, this set of seven experiments in the
domain of music offers a conservative test of the relative influence of
vision versus audition. People consistently report that sound is the most
important source of information in evaluating performance in music.
However, the findings demonstrate that people actually depend primarily on
visual information when making judgments about music performance. People
reliably select the actual winners of live music competitions based on
silent video recordings, but neither musical novices nor professional
musicians were able to identify the winners based on sound recordings or
recordings with both video and sound. The results highlight our natural,
automatic, and nonconscious
dependence on visual cues. The dominance of visual information emerges to
the degree that it is overweighted relative to auditory information, even
when sound is consciously valued as the core domain content.



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