Title: Music and Emotion
1Music and Emotion
- Perfecto Herrera
- Music Perception and Cognition
2(No Transcript)
3Music and Emotion
- Does music convey specific emotions? How do we
experience that? - Does music really evoke emotions?
- If music evokes emotions, why do we emotionally
react to it? - Is it possible to turn a emotionless performance
into another one that conveys some emotion? - Do we really want to know the answer to the
previous questions or are we going to destroy the
magic of music? - Is it possible a music-based emotion engineering?
4What is an emotion (I)?
- "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 - Emotion as opposed to reason (Descartes error,
Damasio 1994) - Emotions have survival value, they are not bells
and whistles of behavior
5Affective phenomena (from Scherer, 2000)
6What is an emotion (II)?
- 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 (activation at different
behavior levels), pleasure/displeasure - generate cognitive processes (e.g. increasing
attention, appraisals, labeling processes) - activate widespread physiological adjustments
(e.g., increasing heart-rate, sweating, crying) - lead to behavior that is often, but not always,
expressive, goal-directed, and adaptive (e.g.,
running away, reiterating exposure)
7The limbic system
Prefrontal cortex modulation of the action plans
Auditory cortex
Nuclueus accumbens reward
Hippocampus episodic memory links to past
experiences
Amygdala survival value/behavior good, bad,
fly, chase, mate
Hypothalamus-hypophysis hormonal release
8The amygdala
- Connecting (associating) external stimuli with
internal values - Not active when parents heard children crying
that were not their own - More active when listening emotional music with
eyes closed (eyes-closed increasing danger
potential -gt more alert) - A modulator to ensure that emotional responses
are appropriate to the external stimuli and to
the social context - Active role in different emotion-related tasks
fear conditioning, contextual conditioning,
recognition of fearful facial expressions, and
emotion-guided decision making
9Primary and secondary emotions
- Primary (limbic, fast circuit thalamus-amygdala)
versus secondary (cortical, slow circuit
thalamus-cortex-amygdala) emotions - Primary emotions require external input
secondary emotions can be generated by internal
working (thoughts) - Somatic marker hypothesis (Damasio, 1994) when
a thought generates a frontal cortex emotional
response, the thought is "marked" by the physical
emotion. - Likewise, cognitive processing of the thought is
affected by the neurotransmitters evoked by the
emotion. Further processing of the thought will
be inhibited by negative emotions, and
facilitated by positive emotions. - The frontal cortices send signals to the limbic
system to generate an emotional response. These
signals may be full-fledged emotions, or may only
produce part of the response spectrum, such as
neurotransmitter release.
10Music and emotion
- Gabrielsson (1995)
- There is an isomorphism between the structure of
music and the structure of feelings - Wagner
- Music begins when language ends
- Music is the language of passion
- Stravinsky
- Music by its nature, is essentially powerless to
express anything at all expression has never
been an inherent property of music
11Music as a way of conveying emotions
- Langner (1942)
- Music represents the dynamic form of emotional
life, not specific emotions - Music is a tonal analogue to emotive life
- Music reveals the nature of feelings that
language cannot approach
12Music as a way of conveying emotions
13Methodological issues
- How to measure emotion in musical-listening
contexts? - Word-lists, ratings and self-reports
- Facial expression (micro changes detectable with
electromyography) - Behavioral changes (crying, avoidance)
- Physiological parameters (breath and heart rate,
skin conductance changes) - fMRI and ERP
- Between-subjects variability
- Within-subject reliability
- Reactivity (what we try to measure disappears
or fades because of the laboratory conditions) - Cultural issues (emotions are expressed
differently in different cultures equivalent
words in 2 languages cannot be emotionally
equivalent)
14Music-induced vs. music-expressed emotions
- Induced Music affects the emotional state of the
listener - Expressed Music is categorized as an emotional
content conveyor
15Why does music convey emotion?
- Hearing resemblance between the music and the
natural expression of the emotion (similarity to
speech). - One example can be anger where the loudness and
the spectral dissonance (derived from frequency
ratios and harmonic coincidence based on
psychoacoustic tests) are two components we can
find in both an angry voice and music. - Accumulated connotations a certain musical
phenomena acquire in a culture we learn in our
culture which musical cues correspond to which
feeling. - One example can be brass instrumentation and slow
tempo meaning solemnity - Kivy (1989)
16Why does music induce emotions?
- Musical expectation we continuously generate and
hold expectations, that the music
as-it-develops-in-time confirms or denies (Meyer,
1956) - Arousal music acts as a source of cognitive
activation by means of its speed, complexity,
beauty or familiarity. Arousal might follow the
amount of complexity we find in stimuli (we tend
to prefer and enjoy moderate levels of
complexity, beauty, etc. (U-shaped function by
Berlyne, 1971) - Mood contagion there are similarities between
emotional language features and musical features
(e.g., pitch contour, prosody) finding them in
music makes the learned emotion to be developed.
Contagiousness can also be developed by observing
audiences happy music induces more smiles, sad
music induces frowning, these behaviors can be
unconsciously imitated, and then the emotion can
be activated (inverse process of emotion
induction)
17Why does music induce emotions?
- Associations music-activated emotions reflect
personal and specific associations that can be
arbitrary with respect to the music content.
Non-musical features can affect the emotional
reaction (e.g. they are playing our song).
Association is learnt by conditioning, not
needing our conscious will. Recall from episodic
memory can be favored by music when subjects have
memory impairments (Sacks, 2007) . - Music imagery We do not need the acoustic
stimulus of music. Our musical imagination, by
means of association can activate mental images
related to emotionally-charged activities,
persons, places.
18Basic emotions
- They are easily distinguished in all the
nonverbal modalities (see photo) - They are linked to survival issues danger,
competition, loss cooperation
- Complex emotions (anger, contentment, curiosity,
disgust, fear, happiness, jealousy, love, pride,
sadness, shame, and tenderness) are more
difficult to communicate by musical means and to
detect by visual inspection of fMRI
19Musical 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) - A moderate amount of surprise and fulfillment of
expectations (tension-relaxation) is preferred
(again the inverted-U curve proposed by Berlyne)
20Musical expectation emotions as a function of
monitoring match and mismatch
- 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?
21Musical expectation emotions as a function of
monitoring match and mismatch
- 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
22Categorical representation
Adjectives and clusters, inspiredin Hevner
(1936)
23- Hevner, 1935
- Stimulus
- 10 short musical excerpts by Schumann, Bach,
Beethoven, Gluck - 2 versions major / minor
- Similar performances
- Subjects / Procedure
- Students, 4 groups
- Each heard 5 major 5 minor
- Replicated by Terwogt van Grinsven (1991)
- Adults more reliable than children or youngsters
- Anger and fear tend to be confused
24Dimensional representation
Russells (1980) circumplex model 2-D space
spanned by valence and arousal emotion
categories are defined by different combinations
of them
25Dimensional representation with determining
features
From Juslin (2001)
Positive Valence
TENDERNESS slow mean tempo (Ga96) slow tone
attacks (Ga96) low sound level (Ga96) small sound
level variability (Ga96) legato articulation
(Ga96) soft timbre (Ga96) large timing variations
(Ga96) accents on stable notes (Li99) soft
duration contrasts (Ga96) final ritardando (Ga96)
HAPPINESS fast mean tempo (Ga95) small tempo
variability (Ju99) staccato articulation
(Ju99) large articulation variability (Ju99) high
sound level (Ju00) little sound level variability
(Ju99) bright timbre (Ga96) fast tone attacks
(Ko76) small timing variations (Ju/La00) sharp
duration contrasts (Ga96) rising micro-intonation
(Ra96)
High Activity
Low Activity
ANGER high sound level (Ju00) sharp timbre
(Ju00) spectral noise (Ga96) fast mean tempo
(Ju97a) small tempo variability (Ju99) staccato
articulation (Ju99) abrupt tone attacks
(Ko76) sharp duration contrasts (Ga96) accents on
unstable notes (Li99) large vibrato extent
(Oh96b) no ritardando (Ga96)
FEAR staccato articulation (Ju97a) very low
sound level (Ju00) large sound level variability
(Ju99) fast mean tempo (Ju99) large tempo
variability (Ju99) large timing variations
(Ga96) soft spectrum (Ju00) sharp
micro-intonation (Oh96b) fast, shallow, irregular
vibrato (Ko00)
SADNESS slow mean tempo (Ga95) legato
articulation (Ju97a) small articulation
variability (Ju99) low sound level (Ju00) dull
timbre (Ju00) large timing variations (Ga96) soft
duration contrasts (Ga96) slow tone attacks
(Ko76) flat micro-intonation (Ba97) slow vibrato
(Ko00) final ritardando (Ga96)
Negative Valence
26Factors used to express emotions
27Factors used to express emotions
- Laurier et al. (simple rules using
acoustic/musical descriptors capable to predict
with correctnessgt80 the expressed emotions in
MP3 collections) - dissonance_dvar lt 0.002717 aggressive
- dissonance_dvar gt 0.002717
- AND spectral_complexity_mean lt 13.557088
not_aggressive - AND spectral_complexity_mean gt 13.557088Â
aggressive - Lyrics content analysis added lt5 of additional
labelling power
28Extended lens model (Brunswik Juslin
Lindström)
29Synthesis of Emotion
An example of the analysis by synthesis
strategy different renditions of the same piece
are synthesized by changing musical parameters,
then we study the effect of the parameter-tuning
on the perceived emotions
30Emotion in time
31Social-emotional aspects
- Massive surveys on music preference and
personality features - Relationships between personality traits and
music preference - Relationships between social groups and music
preference - Music as the preferred way to present oneself
to others, specially for teenagers and youngsters - Heartgraves North
- http//www.peopleintomusic.com/
- Rentfrow Gosling Short Test on Musical
Preferences (STOMP) - http//www.outofservice.com/music-personality-test
/ - http//www.signalpatterns.com/
32- P.N. Juslin J.A. Sloboda (Eds)(2001). Music and
Emotion. Oxford Oxford University Press - Jourdain. R. (1997). Music, the Brain, and
Ecstasy How Music Captures Our Imagination. New
York William Morrow and Company - Course on Music and Emotion by David Huron
http//csml.som.ohio-state-edu/Music829D.html