How music MOVES: Musical parameters and listeners' images of motion

被引:152
作者
Eitan, Z [1 ]
Granot, RY
机构
[1] Tel Aviv Univ, Dept Musicol, IL-69978 Tel Aviv, Israel
[2] Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel
来源
MUSIC PERCEPTION | 2006年 / 23卷 / 03期
关键词
D O I
10.1525/mp.2006.23.3.221
中图分类号
J6 [音乐];
学科分类号
摘要
This article presents an empirical investigation of the ways listeners associate changes in musical parameters with physical space and bodily motion. In the experiments reported, participants were asked to associate melodic stimuli with imagined motions of a human character and to specify the type, direction, and pacechange of these motions, as well as the forces affecting them. The stimuli consisted of pairs of brief figures, one member of a pair presenting an '' intensification '' in a specific musical parameter, the other an '' abatement '' (e.g., crescendo vs. diminuendo, accelerando vs. ritardando). Musical parameters manipulated included dynamics, pitch contour, pitch intervals, attack rate, and articulation. Results indicate that most musical parameters significantly affect several dimensions of motion imagery. For instance, pitch contour affected imagined motion along all three spatial axes (not only verticality), as well as velocity and '' energy.'' A surprising finding of this study is that musical-spatial analogies are often asymmetrical, as a musical change in one direction evokes a significantly stronger spatial analogy than its opposite. Such asymmetries include even the entrenched association of pitch change and spatial verticality, which applies mostly to pitch falls, but only weakly to rises. In general, musical abatements are strongly associated with spatial descents, while musical intensifications are generally associated with increasing speed rather than ascent. The implications of these results for notions of perceived musical space and for accounts of expressive musical gesture are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:221 / 247
页数:27
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   Effects of spectral manipulations of music mixes on musical scene analysis abilities of hearing-impaired listeners [J].
Benjamin, Aravindan Joseph ;
Siedenburg, Kai .
PLOS ONE, 2025, 20 (01)
[32]   Musical and Bodily Predictors of Mental Effort in String Quartet Music: An Ecological Pupillometry Study of Performers and Listeners [J].
Bishop, Laura ;
Jensenius, Alexander Refsum ;
Laeng, Bruno .
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 12
[33]   how music connects: social sensory consciousness in musical ritual [J].
Gonzalez-Grandon, Ximena .
MATERIAL RELIGION, 2018, 14 (03) :423-425
[35]   DYNAMICS OR MOTION, AN INTERPRETATION OF SOME MUSICAL SIGNS IN ROMANTIC PIANO MUSIC [J].
HEIDSIECK, E .
PIANO QUARTERLY, 1988, (140) :56-58
[36]   Mastering musical meaning: images as interpretive resources in multimodal music texts [J].
Weekes, Trish .
VISUAL COMMUNICATION, 2016, 15 (02) :221-250
[37]   Music-images-instruments: French organology and musical iconography review [J].
Guillo, Laurent .
REVUE DE MUSICOLOGIE, 2007, 93 (02) :492-497
[38]   Music-Images-Instruments : French organology and musical iconography review [J].
Racine, Nathalie .
REVUE DE MUSICOLOGIE, 2008, 94 (01) :227-231
[39]   AI and Music: How do listeners and artists perceive it? An Empirical Study toward the Attitude of Humans to AI Music [J].
Iskandar, Kevin Laksana ;
Spil, Ton ;
Bukhsh, Faiza .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE 58TH HAWAII INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2025, :4086-4095
[40]   How Live Music Moves Us: Head Movement Differences in Audiences to Live Versus Recorded Music [J].
Swarbrick, Dana ;
Bosnyak, Dan ;
Livingstone, Steven R. ;
Bansal, Jotthi ;
Marsh-Rollo, Susan ;
Woolhouse, Matthew H. ;
Trainor, Laurel J. .
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 9