About this test: Pitch Memory Span measures your auditory working memory capacity — how many discrete pitches you can hold and recall in sequence. Unlike melody memory which involves connected musical patterns, this test uses isolated tones with long gaps between them to test raw pitch recall without melodic cues.
Assessment Mode:
Start at your chosen span (default: 3 pitches)
If you reproduce the sequence correctly, span increases by 1
One mistake ends the assessment — your span is the last level you passed
This finds your maximum reliable pitch memory capacity
Training Mode:
Practice at a fixed span level of your choice
Complete 20 trials to build consistency
Track your accuracy percentage at that span
Recommended: train at or slightly above your assessed span
Typical spans:
3–4: Below average
5–6: Average range
7–8: Above average
9+: Exceptional
Options:
White keys only: Sequences use only natural notes — easier because notes are more distinct. The full keyboard is still shown and playable.
All keys: Sequences include sharps/flats — harder because chromatic notes sound more similar
1 octave: Easier — fewer possible notes
2 octaves: Harder — more notes to distinguish
Tips: Don't try to create melodies — focus on each pitch individually. Some people find it helpful to associate pitches with spatial positions (low/high) rather than note names.