The effect of music listening on emotional responses to compassionate scenes : the role of stimulus type and trait empathy
Authors
Date
2018Discipline
Music, Mind and Technology (maisteriohjelma)Master's Degree Programme in Music, Mind and TechnologyCopyright
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The perception of emotion is not something we experience using isolated sensory modalities.
Research has shown that auditory and visual domains influence each other in the processing
of affective stimuli. Nevertheless previous studies have looked at the effects of these
influences while dealing with only a few basic emotions, such as happiness, sadness, fear or
anger. It is yet to be observed whether similar interactions can be observed for more complex
emotions.
The present study tested whether listening to music could influence people’s emotional
response to a visual cue for a higher-level emotion such as compassion by evaluating the
effects that different types of music had on compassionate scenes as opposed to noncompassionate
ones. It also set out to explore the role that trait empathy and musical
preference played in accounting for individual differences.
To achieve this, ratings on Valence, Arousal and Compassion for compassion-inducing (CI)
and non-compassion-inducing (NCI) pictures during four different music and silence
conditions were collected. As a measure for empathy the Empathic Concern subscale of the
Interpersonal Reactivity Index was obtained as well as a liking score for each of the music
pieces.
Results showed that High-Valence+Low-Arousal music significantly increased the
compassionate response to both types of pictures, whereas Low-Valence+Low-Arousal and
Low-Valence+High-Arousal music showed virtually no effect. High-Valence+High-Arousal
music, although preferred by most participants, decreased the compassionate response to
affective pictures and increased it for neutral stimuli. More empathic participants displayed
stronger overall feelings of Compassion and also showed more variability in those ratings
between the music conditions, particularly when rating NCI pictures.
...
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