2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2012.11.005
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‘I love Rock ‘n’ Roll’—Music genre preference modulates brain responses to music

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Cited by 28 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…(5) It may vary depending on how much individuals generally derive enjoyment from musical expression and interaction. (6) It may depend on the musical style of the musical feedback participants produce (if for example they considered it part of their repertoire of favorite music) (Dyrlund and Wininger, 2007; Istók et al, 2013). (7) Finally, the combination of music making and high bodily arousal as conducted in the jymmin music feedback technology also gives rise to the possibility that some individuals derive more positive effect on their mood through physiological experience or disposition.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(5) It may vary depending on how much individuals generally derive enjoyment from musical expression and interaction. (6) It may depend on the musical style of the musical feedback participants produce (if for example they considered it part of their repertoire of favorite music) (Dyrlund and Wininger, 2007; Istók et al, 2013). (7) Finally, the combination of music making and high bodily arousal as conducted in the jymmin music feedback technology also gives rise to the possibility that some individuals derive more positive effect on their mood through physiological experience or disposition.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, participants with a hearing loss tended to have larger LPP but not Novelty P3 amplitudes, compared to the normal-hearing participants. Based on the similarity of the LPP in our study with visual and auditory LPPs from other areas of research, such as emotional facial expressions (e.g., Brown et al, 2012;Hajcak et al, 2010) and music perception Istok et al, 2013;Müller et al, 2010), we interpreted the LPP as a component modulated by the emotional rather than cognitive aspects of the task, possibly reflecting the arousal level and thus, the listening effort of the person. While both Novelty P3 and LPP were affected by changes in task difficulty, LPP appeared to be the more sensitive component for capturing listening effort.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…However, the non-preferred genre elicited a stronger LPP response compared to the preferred genre during the classification task (no significant difference was observed during the liking task). This study suggest that affective responses may affect early processes of music categorization even when the task is not to give liking judgments (Istók et al, 2013) In sum, these two studies suggest an involvement of the LPP in posterior regions during both liking and correctness classification task. This suggests that the presentation of music automatically and implicitly elicits affective reactions even though the task is not to decide whether the piece of music is liked or not.…”
Section: Late Positive Potentialmentioning
confidence: 59%