Title: Music%20and%20Emotion
1Music and Emotion
- Sloboda, J.A., Juslin, P.N. (2001).
Psychological Perspectives on Music and Emotion.
In P.N. Juslin J.A. Sloboda (Eds)(2001). Music
and Emotion, OUP, Chapter 4
2- Why does music induce emotions to listeners?
- Are the emotions we experience in relation to
music different from the experience in everyday
life? - Why are different pieces of music associated with
different emotions? - Are performers able to communicate specific
emotions to listeners? - Do emotional responses to music vary as a
function of the cultural context? - How do emotional responses to music affect the
brain and body of listeners?
3Psychological perspective
- A psychological approach to music and emotion
seeks an explanation for how and why we
experience emotional reactions to music, and how
and why we experience music as expressive of
emotion.
4What is an emotion?
- "everyone knows what an emotion is, until asked
to give a definition" (Fehr Russell, 1984,
p.464) - Emotion in both an everyday concept and a
scientific construct. - Involves both an implicit and an explicit body of
knowledge.
5Implicit knowledge
- embodied in so-called 'folk theories' of emotion
- powerful sources that affect our behavior and
thoughts in powerful ways - some emotions feel good, some bad
- some people are more 'emotional' than others
6Explicit knowledge
- development of emotions
- physiological changes associated with emotions
- judgment of emotions from facial or vocal
expressions - three kinds of evidence
- self-report
- expressive behavior
- physiological measurement
7Definition
- Emotion is a complex set of interactions among
subjective and objective factors, mediated by
neural/hormonal systems, which can - give rise to affective experiences such as
feelings of arousal, pleasure/displeasure - generate cognitive processes such as perceptually
relevant effects, appraisals, labeling processes - activate widespread physiological adjustments to
the arousing conditions - lead to behavior that is often, but not always,
expressive, goal-directed, and adative
8The study of emotion in relation to music
- Two kinds of musical emotions (not wholly
independent of each other) - aesthetical value of music
- emotions induced or expressed by music, more or
less apart from the aesthetical value of the
music
9Problems for studying emotions in relation to
music
- Emotional reactions are commonly understood in
terms of their adaptive functions related to
biological survival. - There is great variability between individuals,
and across time within individuals. - Experiments that attempts to measure listeners'
affective responses to music may impact so much
on the listening process that the tasks destroys
the very thing it is supposed to measure (problem
of reactivity).
10Typical characteristics of emotions
- Emotions are functional despite their apparent
non-instrumentality. - Emotions have behavioral, physiological, and
experimental components. - Emotions have proximal elicitors.
- Emotions are intrinsically social.
- Emotions invoke action tendencies.
- Emotions change during the course of human
development.
11Emotions are functional despite their apparent
non-instrumentality
- What functionality do emotions have?
- Are they useful to us, and if so how?
- The primary function of emotions is to guide
behavior emotions evolved because they enabled
successful interaction with the environment. - But how does the idea of functionality apply in
the case of music?
12- The functional architecture of emotions should
constrain our responses to music (e.g., selective
pressures favoring our ability to employ acoustic
cues in our environment to make useful inferences
about the probable behaviors of other
individuals). - Might serve as mood-optimizing function in
people's lives non-instrumentality of other
emotions
13Emotions have behavioral, physiological, and
experimental components
- Self-report musically untrained participants
listened to different pieces of music wrote down
responses results (content analysis) - feeling of pleasure (96)
- perception of stable mood (86)
- feeling of oneness with the music (83)
- perception of spontaneous and transient emotional
states (72) - feeling of movement (65)
14- Expressive behavior People do cry when
listening to some music - Facial electromyography (EMG) subliminal facial
expressions to expressive music - Behavioral measures decision time, distance
approximation, writing speed - Physiological reactions cardiorespiratory
differences
15Emotions have proximal elicitors
- Emotions are elicited. The eliciting event
appears to fulfill a specific role they are not
just stimuli. They appear to act through their
significance, they meaning, their reward or
aversive nature (Frijda, 1986, p.4) - Is it necessary that the person should be able to
know, consciously, what meanings mediate the
emotion?
16Emotions are intrinsically social.
- Emotions are 'contagious'.
17Emotions invoke action tendencies
- Emotions change the probabilities associated with
subsequent behavior (e.g., fear). - Emotions are biologically embedded mechanisms
that ensure that our psychological energies are
directed to the meeting of primary needs , both
physical and psychological. - Emotions by themselves do not guarantee effective
solutions to life's challenges solutions are
developed by learning.
18- Emotional intelligence understanding the link
between one's emotion and effective behavior. - Novels, plays, operas, and films can provide
opportunities to feel emotions with and for the
protagonists, and explore consequences of
different ways of action on these same emotions. - True even in Western art culture passive and
immobile 'respectful silence' of the audience has
such paradigmatic status.
19- Pop concerts context and stimulus for exuberant
and joyful bodily and vocal expressions among
audience members - Soothing music
20Emotions change during the course of human
development
- maturational changes of the nervous system
- changes in the stimulus conditions eliciting
emotions - changes in regulation and coping skills
- changes in the relationship between cognition and
emotion - changes in expressive behavior as a consequence
of mother's communication style - changes associated with cultural influence,
including language
21- Individual differences in emotional responses to
music within age cohorts have by and large not
been systematically examined. - However, see developmental.ppt facial expression,
4 emotions - Preferences for music change over the life span
could partly reflect the fact that certain types
of music resonate better with certain phases of
life in terms of associated emotions. E.g., rock
music with its focus on sexuality, anger, and
rebellion may have a special appeal to
adolescents.
22(No Transcript)
23Intrinsic and extrinsic emotions
- In music there may be a partial decoupling
between the mechanisms that determine intensity
of affect and those that determine emotional
content, the former being predominately
determined by structural characteristics of the
music (intrinsic emotion), the latter being
determined more strongly by contextual factors,
including memories, associations, and priorities
of the person hearing the music (extrinsic
emotion).
24Intrinsic emotion
- Structural characteristics that are associated
with the elicitation of bodily and behavioral
manifestations of emotions such as weeping and
'thrills' or 'shivers', e.g. - syncopation
- enharmonic changes
- melodic appoggiaturas
- other music-theoretical constructs which have in
common their intimate relationship to the
creation, maintenance, confirmation, or
disruption of musical expectations.
25Appoggiatura
- A note, not normally part of a chord, which
displaces a normal note of a chord. The
appoggiatura resolves onto the displaced note
whilst the chord is still sounding. If the
appoggiatura is prepared, by the same note being
present in the previous chord, then the
appoggiatura is normally referred to as a
suspension. Conversely, an appoggiatura may be
referred to as an unprepared suspension. The
appoggiatura usually (but not always) creates a
dissonance with the normal notes of the chord.
More than one appoggiatura may be deployed
concurrently.
26- If musical expectation is really the key to
emotional intensity, how is it that we can feel
emotions to music we are highly familiar with?
27- Many of the violations of expectations may occur
on a subconscious level. - Even when the musical 'narrative' is familiar to
us, we may still be able to enjoy it. We can
appreciate the twists and turns (like re-watching
a great movie). - Iconic and associative sources of emotion, such
as emotional contagion and memories, may remain
much the same throughout repeated listening to
the same piece of music. - Familiarity with an object itself might increase
our liking of that object up to a certain point. - It is possible that some effects of music
processing is executed by a processor, whose
responses are 'hard-wired' in regard to certain
perceptual primitives.
28Musical expectation emotions as a function of
monitoring match and mismatch
- Most compositional systems (e.g., tonal systems)
provide a set of dimensions that establish
psychological distance from 'home' or 'stability
point'. - Proximity or approach to this resting point
involves reduction of tension. - Distance can be measured on a number of
dimensions such as rhythm and meter (strong
beats are stable, weak beats and syncopations are
unstable) and tonality (the tonic is stable,
non-diatonic notes are unstable).
29Extrinsic emotion
- Iconic sources of emotion Iconic relationships
come about through some resemblance between a
musical structure and some event or agent
carrying emotional 'tone'. For instance, loud and
fast music shares features with events of high
energy and so suggests a high energy emotion such
as excitement. - Associative sources of emotion Associative
sources of emotion are those that are premised on
arbitrary and contingent relationships between
the music being experienced and a range of
non-musical factors which also carry emotional
messages of their own.
30Iconic sources of emotion
Throughout history, there has been a number of
different views on what music is able to express
- things and event
- human character
- political and social conditions
- emotion
- motion
- beauty
- Christian faith
- tension and release
31Findings from studies of emotional expression in
music
- Listeners seem to find it natural to attach
emotion labels to pieces of music. - Listeners are often consistent in their judgments
and agree about the emotional expression of the
music. - The veridicality of the judgments is rarely
studies due to a lack of sufficient criteria of
composers' intentions. - Iconic representation of emotions in music seems
to operate on a broad level of emotion
categories. - Listeners' judgments of emotion are influenced by
such parameters as tempo, dynamics, rhythm,
timbre, articulation, pitch, mode, tone attacks,
and harmony.
32Associative sources of emotion
- Certain types of stimuli (e.g., music, smells,
and tastes) seem to become associated in human
memory with particular contexts or events in
earlier life, and provide a trigger to recall
these events (in particular, when events were
occasions of strong emotion). - Even when music does not directly trigger past
experiences, many of the emotional processes are
self-referring in some way (e.g., 'I should have
recognized that', or 'This is not my type of
music').
33Interaction between different sources of emotion
- Intrinsic emotion is locally focused, and
extrinsic emotion is more globally
context-dependent. - Different sources of emotion may interact.