2023
DOI: 10.1177/03057356231205883
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A text mining approach to the use of “groove” in everyday language

Jan Stupacher,
Toni Bechtold,
Olivier Senn

Abstract: When speaking about music, the term groove can refer to objective qualities, such as rhythmic patterns, or to subjective experiences, such as the pleasurable urge to move to the music. However, the mere juxtaposition of objective musical causes and subjective psychological effects may be too simplistic to fully capture the multifaceted groove phenomenon. We therefore broaden the perspective of groove research by analyzing how people use the term groove in the everyday language of 970,220 comments on 155 YouTub… Show more

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“…In many studies, the groove experience has been equaled to PLUMM, but some accounts have shown a more nuanced picture [4,5], added a social dimension [6], or described it as a state of being [7]. Duman et al [8] developed a comprehensive definition: "Groove is a participatory experience (related to immersion, movement, positive affect, and social connection) resulting from the subtle interaction of specific music-(such as time-and pitch-related features), performance-, and/or individual-related factors" (p. 19).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In many studies, the groove experience has been equaled to PLUMM, but some accounts have shown a more nuanced picture [4,5], added a social dimension [6], or described it as a state of being [7]. Duman et al [8] developed a comprehensive definition: "Groove is a participatory experience (related to immersion, movement, positive affect, and social connection) resulting from the subtle interaction of specific music-(such as time-and pitch-related features), performance-, and/or individual-related factors" (p. 19).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%