Constituents of music and visual-art related pleasure : A critical integrative literature review
Tiihonen, T. M., Brattico, E., Maksimainen, J., Wikgren, J., & Saarikallio, S. (2017). Constituents of music and visual-art related pleasure : A critical integrative literature review. Frontiers in Psychology, 8, Article 1218. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01218
Published in
Frontiers in PsychologyAuthors
Date
2017Discipline
MusiikkikasvatusPsykologiaMonitieteinen aivotutkimuskeskusHyvinvoinnin tutkimuksen yhteisöMusic EducationPsychologyCentre for Interdisciplinary Brain ResearchSchool of WellbeingCopyright
© 2017 Tiihonen, Brattico, Maksimainen, Wikgren and Saarikallio. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).
The present literature review investigated how pleasure induced by music and visualart
has been conceptually understood in empirical research over the past 20 years.
After an initial selection of abstracts from seven databases (keywords: pleasure, reward,
enjoyment, and hedonic), twenty music and eleven visual-art papers were systematically
compared. The following questions were addressed: (1) What is the role of the keyword
in the research question? (2) Is pleasure considered a result of variation in the perceiver’s
internal or external attributes? (3) What are the most commonly employed methods and
main variables in empirical settings? Based on these questions, our critical integrative
analysis aimed to identify which themes and processes emerged as key features for
conceptualizing art-induced pleasure. The results demonstrated great variance in how
pleasure has been approached: In the music studies pleasure was often a clear object
of investigation, whereas in the visual-art studies the term was often embedded into
the context of an aesthetic experience, or used otherwise in a descriptive, indirect
sense. Music studies often targeted different emotions, their intensity or anhedonia.
Biographical and background variables and personality traits of the perceiver were
often measured. Next to behavioral methods, a common method was brain imaging
which often targeted the reward circuitry of the brain in response to music. Visualart
pleasure was also frequently addressed using brain imaging methods, but the
research focused on sensory cortices rather than the reward circuit alone. Compared
with music research, visual-art research investigated more frequently pleasure in relation
to conscious, cognitive processing, where the variations of stimulus features and
the changing of viewing modes were regarded as explanatory factors of the derived
experience. Despite valence being frequently applied in both domains, we conclude,
that in empirical music research pleasure seems to be part of core affect and hedonic
tone modulated by stable personality variables, whereas in visual-art research pleasure
is a result of the so called conceptual act depending on a chosen strategy to approach
art. We encourage an integration of music and visual-art into to a multi-modal framework
to promote a more versatile understanding of pleasure in response to aesthetic artifacts.
...
Publisher
Frontiers Research FoundationISSN Search the Publication Forum
1664-1078Keywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/27138574
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as © 2017 Tiihonen, Brattico, Maksimainen, Wikgren and Saarikallio. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Rethinking visual art practice in relation to well-being : a conceptual analysis
Jaatinen, Päivi-Maria (University of Jyväskylä, 2015)This study examines how the concepts related to visual art practice and well-being have been used in the arts and academic sectors. Furthermore, it studies whether it is possible to create a new theoretical and ... -
Towards a more explicit account of the transformation : Reply to comments on “An integrative review of the enjoyment of sadness associated with music”
Eerola, Tuomas; Vuoskoski, Jonna K.; Peltola, Henna-Riikka; Putkinen, Vesa; Schäfer, Katharina (Elsevier BV, 2018)Our integrative framework for explaining the enjoyment of sadness associated with music sparked a delightful number (13) of commentaries which challenge, stimulate, strengthen and shape the ideas we initially put forward. ... -
Apperceiving visual elements in human-technology interaction design
Silvennoinen, Johanna (University of Jyväskylä, 2017)Visual design of technological artefacts is an integral part of peoples’ experiences in technology-interaction. Visual product properties are capable of eliciting affective responses and multisensorial experiences in ... -
Toward a better understanding and conceptualization of affect self-regulation through music : A critical, integrative literature review
Baltazar, Margarida; Saarikallio, Suvi (Sage Publications Ltd.; Society for Education, Music and Psychology Research, 2016)Research on the affective phenomena involved in music has grown exponentially over the last 20 years. One particular topic is the use of music for affect self-regulation (i.e., the process of creating, changing, or maintaining ... -
Audience experience of commercial videos and feature length films : are they universal or culturally mediated?
Cañas-Bajo, Jose (University of Jyväskylä, 2017)Audiovisual contents constitute one of the most common ways of communicating information. However, audiovisual products are difficult to study because they integrate a lot of complex communication and artistic elements. ...