Notifications
No Notifications

Welcome to the Neuroarts Resource Center!

Our team will periodically post updates in this space to keep you informed on how the platform is evolving. Thank you for being part of the neuroarts community.

An exploratory study of musical emotions and psychophysiology

December 1st, 1997
Ithaca, NY, United Kingdom
C L Krumhansl
Does music elicit emotional responses in listeners or do listeners simply express emotions they recognize in the music? This study looks at these different approaches to understanding emotional responses to music by measuring biophysical signals in participants as they listened to music of different emotional modalities, and their findings support the first view of musical emotions.
Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037/1196-1961.51.4.336
Posted byMahmoud Said

Abstract/Description

A basic issue about musical emotions concerns whether music elicits emotional responses in listeners (the 'emotivist' position) or simply expresses emotions that listeners recognize in the music (the 'cognitivist' position). To address this, psychophysiological measures were recorded while listners heard two excerpts chosen to represent each of three emotions: sad, fear, and happy. The measures covered a fairly wide spectrum of cardiac, vascular, electrodermal, and respiratory functions. Other subjects indicated dynamic changes in emotions they experienced while listening to the music on one of four scales: sad, fear, happy, and tension. Both physiological and emotion judgements were made on a second-by-second basis. The physiological measures all showed a significant effect of music compared to the pre-music interval. A number of analyses, including correlations between physiology and emotion judgments, found significant differences among the excerpts. The sad excerpts produced the largest changes in heart rate, blood pressure, skin conductance and temperature. The fear excerpts produced the largest changes in blood transit time and amplitude. The happy excerpts produced the largest changes in the measures of respiration. These emotion-specific physiological changes only partially replicated those found for nonmusical emotions. The physiological effects of music observed generally support the emotivist view of musical emotions.

Associated Authors

Associated Organizations

Associated Journals/Periodicals