Authors
Patrick G Hunter, E Glenn Schellenberg, Ulrich Schimmack
Publication date
2010/2
Journal
Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts
Volume
4
Issue
1
Pages
47
Publisher
Educational Publishing Foundation
Description
The authors examined similarities and differences between (1) listeners’ perceptions of emotions conveyed by 30-s pieces of music and (2) their emotional responses to the same pieces. Using identical scales, listeners rated how happy and how sad the music made them feel, and the happiness and the sadness expressed by the music. The music was manipulated to vary in tempo (fast or slow) and mode (major or minor). Feeling and perception ratings were highly correlated but perception ratings were higher than feeling ratings, particularly for music with consistent cues to happiness (fast-major) or sadness (slow-minor), and for sad-sounding music in general. Associations between the music manipulations and listeners’ feelings were mediated by their perceptions of the emotions conveyed by the music. Happiness ratings were elevated for fast-tempo and major-key stimuli, sadness ratings were elevated for slow …
Total citations
20102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202471526292033337039503132283619
Scholar articles