PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Cultural differences in the use of acoustic cues for musical emotion experience.

  • Vishal Midya,
  • Jeffrey Valla,
  • Hymavathy Balasubramanian,
  • Avantika Mathur,
  • Nandini Chatterjee Singh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222380
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 9
p. e0222380

Abstract

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Does music penetrate cultural differences with its ability to evoke emotion? The ragas of Hindustani music are specific sequences of notes that elicit various emotions: happy, romantic, devotion, calm, angry, longing, tension and sad. They can be presented in two modes, alaap and gat, which differ in rhythm, but match in tonality. Participants from Indian and Non-Indian cultures (N = 144 and 112, respectively) rated twenty-four pieces of Hindustani ragas on eight dimensions of emotion, in a free response task. Of the 192 between-group comparisons, ratings differed in only 9% of the instances, showing universality across multiple musical emotions. Robust regression analyses and machine learning methods revealed tonality best explained emotion ratings for Indian participants whereas rhythm was the primary predictor in Non-Indian listeners. Our results provide compelling evidence for universality in emotions in the auditory domain in the realm of musical emotion, driven by distinct acoustic features that depend on listeners' cultural backgrounds.