2001
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2001.tb05763.x
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Development of the Happy‐Sad Distinction in Music Appreciation

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Cited by 14 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…A preliminary analysis on the relations between the technical characteristics of the excerpts and the psychophysiological measures indicates that arousing excerpts had faster tempo than calming ones and that positive excerpts had faster tempo and more dance-like rhythms than negative excerpts (Gomez and Danuser, 2004). Other things being equal, increased speed tends to be associated with positive emotions (Wedin, 1972;Dalla Bella et al, 2001). This is likely to explain why breathing accelerated and flows augmented with increasing pleasantness.…”
Section: Respirationmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…A preliminary analysis on the relations between the technical characteristics of the excerpts and the psychophysiological measures indicates that arousing excerpts had faster tempo than calming ones and that positive excerpts had faster tempo and more dance-like rhythms than negative excerpts (Gomez and Danuser, 2004). Other things being equal, increased speed tends to be associated with positive emotions (Wedin, 1972;Dalla Bella et al, 2001). This is likely to explain why breathing accelerated and flows augmented with increasing pleasantness.…”
Section: Respirationmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Heschl's gyrus is a known Page 10 asymmetrical (left ≠ right) anatomical structure [26]; therefore we utilized hemispheric lateralization statistics [27] with cytoarchitectonic-MRI probabilistic maps of HG [26]. For area right (R) or left (L) asymmetrical and transformed to a symmetrical template, not included in the contralateral side, some issue may occur whereby its contribution is less or more than the non- The present manuscript used 3 second stimuli from an emotion identification task that has previously categorized acoustic stimuli as happy or sad [16,17]. Happy and sad acoustic stimuli have differing contributions of fine structure and envelope, which we theorized convey the emotion in sound.…”
Section: Study Limitations and Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our aim for the present experiment was to determine if hemispheric lateralization of amygdala and Heschl's gyrus (HG) subdivisions could differentiate a well-established acoustic emotion identification task [16,17]. Our thinking was based on the Zatorre group principle that the right hemisphere would be more specialized for processing spectral information such as fine spectral cues while the left hemisphere would favor temporal cues [18], originally proposed by Lackner & Teuber, 1973 [19].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Os resultados desses estudos mostraram que as emoções percebidas pelos ouvintes ocorrem de forma consistente para os mesmos trechos musicais (Gabrielsson & Juslin, 2003;Robinson, 1997;Ramos, Bueno, & Bigand, 2011;Ramos & Bueno 2012a;. Essa coerência foi encontrada em adultos e crianças (Dalla Bella, Peretz, Rousseau, Gosselin, Ayotte, Lavoie & 2001), participantes de culturas diferentes (Balkwill & Thompson, 1999) e mesmo após os participantes refazerem o experimento com intervalo de várias semanas (Bigand, Vieillard, Madurell, Marozeau & Dacquet, 2005).…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…A abordagem categórica considera que as emoções percebidas pelos ouvintes através da música são organizadas em quatro categorias, Alegria, Serenidade, Tristeza e Medo/Raiva, e essas emoções são chamadas de emoções de base (Ramos & Bueno, 2012b;Ramos et al, 2011). Em alguns estudos foram encontradas mais de uma emoção percebida por diferentes participantes em um mesmo trecho musical, como Alegria e Tristeza (Dalla Bella et al, 2001;Juslin & Laukka, 2003;.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified