Music ranks among the greatest human pleasures. It consistently engages the reward system, and converging evidence implies it exploits predictions to do so. Both prediction confirmations and errors are essential for understanding one's environment, and music offers many of each as it manipulates interacting patterns across multiple timescales. Learning models suggest that a balance of these outcomes (i.e., intermediate complexity) optimizes the reduction of uncertainty to rewarding and pleasurable effect. Yet evidence of a similar pattern in music is mixed, hampered by arbitrary measures of complexity. In the present studies, we applied a well-validated information-theoretic model of auditory expectation to systematically measure two key aspects of musical complexity: predictability (operationalized as information content [IC] ), and uncertainty (entropy). In Study 1, we evaluated how these properties affect musical preferences in 43 male and female participants; in Study 2, we replicated Study 1 in an independent sample of 27 people and assessed the contribution of veridical predictability by presenting the same stimuli seven times. Both studies revealed significant quadratic effects of IC and entropy on liking that outperformed linear effects, indicating reliable preferences for music of intermediate complexity. An interaction between IC and entropy further suggested preferences for more predictability during more uncertain contexts, which would facilitate uncertainty reduction. Repeating stimuli decreased liking ratings but did not disrupt the preference for intermediate complexity. Together, these findings support long-hypothesized optimal zones of predictability and uncertainty in musical pleasure with formal modeling, relating the pleasure of music listening to the intrinsic reward of learning.
机构:
NYU, Dept Psychol, New York, NY USA
NYU, Ctr Language Mus & Emot CLaME, New York, NY USA
NYU, Mus & Audio Res Lab MARL, New York, NY USA
Dept Psychol, 6 Washington Pl, New York, NY 10003 USANYU, Dept Psychol, New York, NY USA
Abrams, Ellie Bean
Namballa, Richa
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机构:
NYU, Mus & Audio Res Lab MARL, New York, NY USANYU, Dept Psychol, New York, NY USA
Namballa, Richa
He, Richard
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机构:
NYU, Dept Psychol, New York, NY USA
NYU, Ctr Language Mus & Emot CLaME, New York, NY USA
NYU, Mus & Audio Res Lab MARL, New York, NY USANYU, Dept Psychol, New York, NY USA
He, Richard
Poeppel, David
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机构:
NYU, Dept Psychol, New York, NY USA
NYU, Ctr Language Mus & Emot CLaME, New York, NY USANYU, Dept Psychol, New York, NY USA
Poeppel, David
Ripolles, Pablo
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机构:
NYU, Dept Psychol, New York, NY USA
NYU, Ctr Language Mus & Emot CLaME, New York, NY USA
NYU, Mus & Audio Res Lab MARL, New York, NY USA
Dept Psychol, 6 Washington Pl, New York, NY 10003 USANYU, Dept Psychol, New York, NY USA
机构:
NYU, Dept Psychol, 6 Washington Pl, New York, NY 10003 USA
NYU, Mus & Auditory Res Lab MARL, New York, NY USA
NYU, Ctr Language Mus & Emot CLaME, Max Planck Inst, New York, NY USAUniv Lumiere Lyon 2, Lab Etud Mecanismes Cognitifs, Lyon, France
Ripolles, Pablo
Rodriguez-Fornells, Antoni
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机构:
Bellvitge Biomed Res Inst, Cognit & Brain Plastic Unit, Barcelona 08097, Spain
Univ Barcelona, Dept Cognit Dev & Educ Psychol, Barcelona, Spain
Inst Catalana Recerca & Estudis Avancats, Barcelona, SpainUniv Lumiere Lyon 2, Lab Etud Mecanismes Cognitifs, Lyon, France