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Comparing the emotional effects of semantic content and vocal expression of lyrics Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-10 Nathan Pond
Despite a growing literature suggesting that the lyrics of music may have an emotional effect, there are as of yet no studies examining which elements of lyrics influence emotional experience. The present study explored the emotional effect of lyrics sung without a melodic accompaniment, examining whether the vocal expression or the semantic content of the lyrics had a greater influence on emotional
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The melody in the mind: Associations between earworms, schizotypy, and subclinical obsessive-compulsive disorder Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-07 Flóra Fül?p, Ferenc Honbolygó
Earworms are a form of involuntary musical imagery which are in many ways similar to musical hallucinations and obsessions present in clinical disorders, such as schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Previous research has shown relationships between earworms and schizotypy as well as subclinical OCD. The aim of this study was to investigate these associations in a Hungarian sample
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“My musical self-portrait”: The phenomenology of musical improvisation Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-06 Viktor Kemény, Szabolcs Bandi, Dorian Vida, Mátyás Káplár, Gy?rgy Révész
Musical improvisation is a widely used practice within many musical genres and cultures. But although there have been several studies on the experience and psychological benefits of music listening and music making, few have focused specifically on musical improvisation outside the practices of music therapy and jazz improvisation. In this study, we aim to explore the phenomenology of musical improvisation
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Latino Immigrant Children’s Acculturative Stress in Music Classes: A Structural Equation Model Journal of Research in Music Education (IF 1.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-01 Giulia Ripani
Research shows that the process of acculturation (adjustment to a new environment) determines psychological outcomes, such as acculturative stress. This relationship is affected by mediator variables, including social support and self-perceptions. Using structural equation modeling, this study explored how support in and through music and music self-perceptions affected the relationship between acculturation
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Age is just a number: Persistent participation in Electronic Dance Music by women over 40 years Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-30 Alinka E Greasley, Alice O’Grady, Shauna E Stapleton
Participation in electronic dance music events has a range of benefits for health and wellbeing and attracts a broad range of attendees, including those who no longer fit within the category of ‘youth’. Although a broadening demographic indicates growing diversification and inclusivity within club culture, experiences differ between groups and reveal socially constructed norms associated with age and
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How music education students embrace pre-performance rituals to enhance their craft Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-29 Oksana Komarenko, Rebecca Gold, Gerardo Ramirez
We investigate the prevalence, development, and impact of pre-performance rituals among music education students, uncovering their significant role in enhancing individual and group performance and in fostering community and belonging. Our study employed a mixed-methods approach, combining a survey of 97 undergraduate music students with an in-depth qualitative analysis of open-ended responses. We
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How do children with hearing loss progress in group flute lessons compared to their normally hearing peers? A preliminary study Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-21 Eloise C Doherty, Margaret S Barrett, Wayne J Wilson
Music education for individuals with hearing loss has a long history, yet it is not comprehensively understood how children with hearing loss progress in mainstream instrumental music settings. The present study addressed this by assessing the progress of eight flute students, four with hearing loss who wore hearing aids and four with normal hearing, over 9 months of group lessons. Results showed that
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The musical actions of mobile youth Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-17 Gabriela Ocádiz
In this paper, I explore how newcomer youth navigated identity, agency, and adaptation through music education at the Youth Music Program (YMP) in Canada. By analyzing their musical actions, this paper challenges dominant vulnerability narratives and highlights students’ creative and adaptive capacities. Drawing on critical ethnography and sociological perspectives on musical agency, findings suggest
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Conductors’ views on individual practice activities Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-16 Helen Jossberger, Erkki Huovinen, Martin Ritter, Hans Gruber
This study explored how professional conductors understand the role of individual (purposeful) practice and how they describe the contents of such practice. Twelve professional conductors were interviewed and content analysis was used to analyze the data. The results show that the participants understood conducting as a lifelong learning process. Through intensive individual practice, they had built
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Musicians are faster to process hierarchical Navon letters Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-12 Erica Pomini, Alessandra Pecunioso, Christian Agrillo
Several studies have reported an association between music training and enhanced visuo-spatial abilities—for example, musicians have been found to pay greater attention to local details of the visual scene. However, no studies have directly tested whether long-term music training impacts the global-to-local precedence commonly described in literature. We address this issue by comparing the performance
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Comprehensive Musicianship through Performance (CMP) model in choir ensemble: Perspective form choirmasters in Klang Valley, Malaysia Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-12 Queen Nie Liaw, Wen Fen Beh, Feng-Hsu Lee
Choir ensembles have been influential in shaping the esteemed culture of schools in recent decades. Despite this, choirmasters frequently place a significant emphasis on technical proficiency, considering it a key determinant of the choir’s learning rather than creating a thorough curriculum that covers all facets of comprehending music. In response, the current study aims to ascertain the criteria
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A scoping review and categorization of music and health psychometric inventories Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-11 Friederike Koehler, Michael J Silverman, Amy Riegelman, Jessica M Abbazio, Suvi Saarikallio
Healthcare is often dependent on evidence derived from quantitative measurement. Music-based psychometric inventories are thus necessary to quantify health-related constructs. Despite an increase in the number of inventories, there is no systematic overview of the existing inventories, which may hinder dialogue across music disciplines (e.g., music psychology, music therapy). Therefore, the purpose
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Identity formation and possible selves of early career instrumental music teachers: A qualitative study Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-11 Leon de Bruin
Teacher identity is a complex and non-linear evolution involving knowledge, skill, formation, transformation, and scrutiny of what one is doing and who one can become. This phenomenological investigation studied the views of 12 early career instrumental music teachers working professionally in Melbourne, Australia. Utilising possible selves theory, interpretative phenomenological analysis revealed
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The common denominator: the case for an anthropocentric music education Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.0) Pub Date : 2025-04-11 Katya Davisson
In the words of Eric Lewis, “approaching Afrological musics from the theoretical perspective of a Western aesthetic…yields not only a lack of understanding…but can have pernicious political and social results.” In this paper, I demonstrate the relevance of this statement to the British Music classroom. In Part One, I outline the current state of the UK’s Model Music Curriculum and seek to identify
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The impact of a focused listening experience on self-compassion and mental health help-seeking Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-04 Rachel G McClymont, Amanda E Krause
Many people do not seek mental health support due to self-stigma; however, music can assist people in seeking support. Therefore, the present study explored how attending a focused music listening event might promote self-compassion and mindfulness and, in turn, how experiencing these might promote mental health help-seeking intentions. This case study focused on the Indigo Project’s Listen Up event
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How does music contribute to well-being? Perspectives from homeless young adults with problematic psychoactive substance use Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-04 Elise Cournoyer Lemaire, Christine Loignon, Chelsea Grothe, Marie Jauffret-Roustide, André Lema?tre, Karine Bertrand
Homeless young adults with problematic psychoactive substance (PS) use face multiple challenges that compromise their well-being. Despite these challenges, few of them access psychosocial services and rather rely on personal resources to promote their own well-being. However, literature has been largely centered on their difficulties, leaving their strengths and capacities unknown. Despite this lack
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Absolute pitch shift Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-04 Jon Baggaley
Absolute pitch (AP) enables its possessors to identify musical notes and keys by qualities of tone height and tone chroma. With advancing age, an unknown proportion of AP possessors perceives changes in these qualities, usually described as in the sharp direction and to the extent of a semitone or tone. The phenomenon is identified here as absolute pitch shift (APS). Using a cellphone-based tone generator
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Music on the move: understanding music as otherwise knowledge in early childhood Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.0) Pub Date : 2025-04-02 Alejandra Pacheco-Costa, José J. Roa-Trejo, Fernando Guzmán-Simón
Posthuman understanding of music and bodies as matter highlights otherwise forms of musical embodied learning. In this paper, we focus on an early childhood classroom music event and think diffractively with cognitive and posthuman theories in order to extend our insight into it. Accordingly, we explore cognitive approaches to music and movement, as well as posthuman concepts such as agency, embodiment
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Checking in: Mental wellness and the music educator Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-01 Phillip D Payne, Natalie Steele Royston
Given the rise in awareness of the mental health crisis, we set out to determine a baseline for mental wellness among current music educators. In a nationwide survey, music educators ( N = 695) responded to a series of questions focused on mental wellness, stress, and personality. Music educators shared that they struggle with mental wellness at a higher rate than the general population while data
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Expanding the music circle through networked improvisation in an inclusive ensemble Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-01 Ellen Waterman, Erin Parkes, Geneviève Cimon, Jesse Stewart
People with disabilities are confronted with many barriers to participation in inclusive music making, including but not limited to challenges accessing appropriately adapted program curricula and pedagogical approaches. This article reports on a partnered research project ‘Expanding the Music Circle’ that brought professional orchestra musicians, special music educators and adults with profound disabilities
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Auditory affective priming: The role of trait anxiety and stimulus type Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-30 James Armitage, Tuomas Eerola
To date, there has been relatively little research on the relationship between anxiety and music. Trait anxiety (TA) is known to modulate responses to threat-related stimuli, but it is unclear whether this is driven by differences or biases related to attention, vigilance avoidance, or information processing. We evaluated competing predictions based on Attentional Control Theory (ACT), Vigilance Avoidance
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The mock concert: How early-career performers decipher and develop stage mastery Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-29 Olivia Urbaniak, Helen F. Mitchell
Expert performers understand the impact of sight and sound on the concert stage and project performativity to captivate their audiences. Early-career performers embarking on a professional performance career can benefit from experts’ strategies to develop their performance skills and enhance stagecraft. The aim of this study was to develop and trial a mock concert as experiential learning for professional
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East Asian-Australian preservice and early career music teachers and their heritage music in New South Wales schools: a case study Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-28 Ke Wang, Michael Webb
This study investigates the extent to which a group of Australian preservice and early career secondary school music teachers of East Asian heritage are likely to teach aspects of their heritage music. It is positioned against a background of national multiculturalism and approaches to cultural inclusivity in Australian society, as well as the long-standing notion of ‘Asia literacy’ in Australian education
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Enabling more equitable teaching of advanced GCE level (A-Level) Music in England: a partnership approach Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-27 Robert Gardiner
Recent governmental figures have demonstrated that the number of students taking an examination in A-Level Music across England has fallen by 41% in eleven years (Ofqual, 2023a). Furthermore, areas with lower POLAR ratings (i.e. historical rates of participation in higher education) and greater levels of deprivation correlate with lower uptake of A-Level Music (Whittaker et al., 2019). These findings
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Difference in instrumental tuition in higher music education: towards an analytical framework Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-27 Jon Helge S?tre, Morten Carlsen, Henrik Holm
Instrumental tuition is by many seen as the cornerstone of higher music education (HME) performance programmes. An increasing body of research looks into its strengths and weaknesses and calls for development in a number of ways. This study contributes to this debate by exploring the ways in which international instrumental tuition practices are different, however limited to Western classical music
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How much is too much? Effects of unexpressive, expressive, and overly-expressive conducting on ensemble expressivity ratings Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-03-26 Brian Silvey, D Gregory Springer, Amanda Greenbacker-Mitchell, Collin Clark, Nicholas Doshier, Andrew Dubbert
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of unexpressive, expressive, and overly-expressive conducting on college musicians’ ratings of ensemble expressivity. Participants ( N = 133) from the United States viewed three video recordings of three conductors whose unexpressive, expressive, or overly-expressive conducting performances had been synchronized with the same corresponding, high-quality
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The problem of secondary school music enrolments: Tensions between relevance, engagement and improving musical skills and knowledge Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-03-26 Michael Newton, Renee Crawford, Jane Southcott
Global educational constructs affect students’ valuing of school music and continuation in music education beyond compulsory education. This United Kingdom-based study sought to understand the primary influences on students’ music education enrolment decisions after their compulsory years of schooling. Using mixed-methods research we investigated 346 Year 9 (compulsory) and Year 10 (post-compulsory)
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A structural equation model of preschool teacher candidates’ self-efficacy beliefs for music teaching: The role of academic and preschool teaching self-efficacy Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-03-26 ?a?r? ?en
This study sought to explore the interrelationships between preschool teacher candidates’ self-efficacy in music teaching, their academic self-efficacy and their self-efficacy in preschool teaching. A review of the relevant literature was conducted, and Structural Equation Modeling was used to examine the relationships between variables. The study sample comprised 425 preschool teacher candidates.
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The Effects of Post-Performance Conductor Behaviors on Perceptions of Ensemble Performance Quality and Conductor Competence Journal of Research in Music Education (IF 1.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-12 Victoria Warnet
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of post-performance conductor behaviors on college music students’ perceptions of ensemble performance quality and conductor competence. Participants ( N = 202) were collegiate musicians who watched two videos of a male or female conductor, one with excellent and one with poor post-performance conductor behaviors. Although the visual aspects of each
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Editorial Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-03-04 Francisco Javier Zarza-Alzugaray, Gwen Moore, Alex Ruthmann
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Does length of training period impact the effectiveness of reciprocal peer teaching in university group piano students? Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-03-04 Jinnan Liu, David J Saccardi
Reciprocal peer teaching (RPT) is an instructional strategy rooted in collaborative learning principles, wherein students take on the roles of both tutor and tutee. It has been examined in several music education contexts, including elementary, secondary, and university ensembles; however, group piano has yet to be examined. The purpose of this study was to determine what effects there were, if any
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Oboe educators’ perspectives on playing-related injury, Part II: Barriers, solutions, and teaching practices Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-02-27 Heather M Macdonald, Christine Guptill
Music educators are uniquely positioned to promote student playing-related health, yet little is known about their current approach to student wellness. This article aimed to identify barriers and solutions to musician health promotion and to document studio music instructors’ approaches to wellness topics with students. Using a qualitative description approach, in-depth interviews with 10 oboe teachers
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Doctor Who? A Demographic Profile of Doctoral Recipients in Music From 1984 to 2022 Journal of Research in Music Education (IF 1.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-26 David S. Miller
The purpose of this study was to examine the demographic profile of doctoral music recipients by discipline from 1984 to 2022. Using sociological institutionalist and feminist institutionalist frameworks, I analyzed institution-level panel data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System ( N = 3,461) to examine the demographic characteristics of doctoral recipients in music education, music
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Adaptations, Code-Switching, and Novelty With Cultural Integrity: Musicians Performing and Learning Musical Instruments in Different Musical Traditions Journal of Research in Music Education (IF 1.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-24 Sangmi Kang
The purpose of this phenomenological inquiry was to examine musicians’—who already have extensive training in a familiar musical style—intensive, hands-on, performance-based learning experience of different musical traditions based on the theoretical frameworks of bi-musicality and interactive constructivism. Through chain sampling, I conducted interviews with eight musicians from multiple countries
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Undergraduate Music Students’ Self-Reports of Conducting Anxiety in Introductory Conducting Courses Journal of Research in Music Education (IF 1.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-22 Bradley J. Regier, Melissa Baughman, Alec D. Scherer, Brian A. Silvey
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether undergraduate music students’ conducting anxiety associated with their self-reported levels of depression, self-compassion, self-efficacy for conducting, concern with others’ perceptions, and conducting beliefs and behaviors. Participants who were enrolled in an introductory conducting course ( N = 128) completed a questionnaire that included adopted
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“The Bridge Between Cuba and Me”: The Experiences of Bilingual AfroLatiné Music Education Students Journal of Research in Music Education (IF 1.2) Pub Date : 2025-02-22 Marjoris Regus
This collective instrumental case study explores the experiences of Spanish-English bilingual AfroLatina/o/é collegiate students in U.S. undergraduate music education degree programs. The theoretical frameworks of Black critical theory (BlackCrit) and Latino critical theory (LatCrit) frame this study to interpret the experiences of AfroLatina/o/é students. Data collection included nine semistructured
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Examining the relationships among self-efficacy, intrinsic motivation, and self-worth of adolescent singers in structural equation modeling Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-02-17 Kexin Xu
The purpose of this study was to understand the relationships among self-efficacy, intrinsic motivation, and self-worth of adolescent singers, and how each construct functions in high school choir. The second purpose was to understand the degree to which these constructs predicted singing participation after high school graduation. Participants consisted of 215 high school students enrolled in choir
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Impact of cross-modal priming using emotional music on facial emotion recognition among autistic children Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-02-13 Fengrui Xu, Xiaoyue Ding, Gong-Liang Zhang, Dianzhi Liu, Jingyi Liu, Deming Shu
To examine the impact of music as a cross-modal prime on facial emotion recognition ability in autistic children, this study compares the priming effect of music with that of faces as an intramodal prime and nonverbal sounds as the same cross-modal prime. The response time and accuracy of facial emotion recognition (happy and sad) were compared among 21 neurotypical children and 17 autistic children
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Achievements, difficulties, and goals of the Spanish Society for Music Education (SEM-EE): A phenomenological study Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-02-07 Ana ?lamo Orellana, Marta Martínez-Rodríguez
The Spanish Society for Music Education ( Sociedad para la Educación Musical del Estado Espa?ol, SEM-EE in its Spanish acronym), has been dedicated to music education for almost half a century. Even so, it is currently difficult to find studies on its activity or impact. The aim of this study is to learn about the achievements, difficulties, and goals for SEM-EE that have emerged along the way and
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A new look at the potential links between music practice, empathy, and prosociality Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-02-06 Dorothée Morand-Grondin, Beatriz Oliveira, Floris T van Vugt, Simon Rigoulot
Engaging in music practice is often assumed to increase empathy and prosociality. However, data in support of this relationship are limited, leaving unclear which components of empathy (cognitive empathy, emotional contagion, and emotional disconnection) and prosocial behaviors, if any, would be affected. Here, we recruited musicians with more than 2 years of musical experience ( n = 80) and nonmusicians
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Beat perception in polyrhythms is influenced by spontaneous motor tempo, musicianship, and played musical style Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-30 Jan Stupacher, Cecilie M?ller, Alexandre Celma-Miralles, Peter Vuust
No two people perceive the same music alike. This may apply especially to polyrhythms, which consist of two or more rhythms with indivisible regular pulses, such as three over four (3:4). Either of these pulses can be perceived as the underlying beat. Previously, we showed that people naturally tap along to pulses that can be subdivided into groups of two or four equally spaced units (i.e., binarized
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High school music teachers’ attitudes and practices regarding culturally responsive teaching in musical theatre production Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-01-23 Apinporn Chaiwanichsiri
Cultural awareness is crucial in fostering inclusive and authentically representative musical theatre productions in today’s diverse educational landscape. I designed this study to examine U.S. music teachers’ attitudes, perspectives, and the integration of strategies related to culturally responsive teaching (CRT) into their high school musical theatre productions, including the challenges they encounter
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Spontaneous motor tempo modulates the effect of music tempo on arousal levels Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-18 Kyoko Hine, Koki Abe, Shigeki Nakauchi
Music tempo affects listeners’ mental state, especially arousal levels. However, several studies have demonstrated that the effect of music tempo on arousal while listening to music can be modulated by individual differences, such as the pace of mental activity, that is, spontaneous motor tempo (SMT). Thus, SMT is a candidate factor that affects the relationship between music tempo and arousal. Here
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Thank you for the music: Music as a social surrogate that protects against social threats Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-18 Elaine Paravati, Esha Naidu, Shira Gabriel
Social need fulfillment is imperative to well-being, leading to a strong motivation to ensure that social needs are met. The social surrogacy hypothesis proposes that individuals may use non-human social targets, including television characters, books, or comfort foods, to address social needs. The current work sought to examine the social surrogacy hypothesis in the domain of music. Utilizing both
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“A space to be myself ”: Music and self-determination in the lives of autistic adults Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-17 Kaja Koro?ec, Anna Backman Bister, Eva Bojner Horwitz
Despite many decades of academic interest in music and autism, we know little about what music means to autistic adults and how they experience it. The few existing studies lack a common theoretical basis and are therefore difficult to compare and integrate. To address this gap, we investigated whether Self-Determination Theory can be used as a common framework for understanding the functions of music
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Psychiatric diagnoses of professional musicians: Results of an outpatient service specializing in musicians’ health Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-17 Isabel Fernholz, Christian Hering, Hagen Kunte, Jennifer Mumm, Andreas Str?hle, Alexander Schmidt, Antonia Bendau, Jens Plag
Professional musicians are often confronted with multiple profession-related stressors, which may be associated with an increased risk of mental strain, but empirical evidence focusing on clinical samples of musicians is limited. The aim of this study was to examine clinically confirmed mental disorders and personality accentuations in musicians attending a musician-specific outpatient service, to
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Meta-analysis on the effects of music participation on social and emotional measures across the lifespan Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-17 Patrick K Cooper
The purpose of this study was to conduct a random-effects meta-analysis to measure the overall mean effect of music participation on social and emotional measures in participants across the lifespan. Results showed small to medium overall effects ( N = 18,564, k = 56, g = .23, p < .0001, 95% confident interval = [.16, .29]), indicating subjects who participated in music had better scores on social
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From structural listening to daydreaming: Listening modes influence the individual experience in live concerts Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-17 Christian Weining, Deborah Meier, Melanie Wald-Fuhrmann, Martin Tr?ndle
Listening modes are often ignored in music perception research, especially when it comes to the supposedly attentive listening situation of a classical concert. The audience members’ various ways of listening, understood as the directedness of activity toward different dimensions of sound, is hypothesized to play a key role in the experience of live music. We assessed listening activity of participants
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The Case for QuantCrit: An Analysis of Race and Gender in the Journal of Research in Music Education Journal of Research in Music Education (IF 1.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-10 Saleel Adarkar Menon, Anne Martin, Andrew Bohn
The Journal of Research in Music Education ( JRME) is an important resource in music education with a history of eminence in publication, citation, and influence on research trends and practices. Recent qualitative research appearing in the JRME has demonstrated a nuanced focus on the relevance of race and gender and marginalized perspectives within music education. This led us to question whether
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The cognitive and emotional content of music-evoked autobiographical memories in older adults Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-09 Teresa Lesiuk, Giulia Ripani
Music can play a significant role in mitigating cognitive deficits in aging adults. When music is long known and has an emotional significance (i.e., autobiographical music), it can trigger memories of past experiences (i.e., Music-Evoked Autobiographical Memories, MEAMs). In this study, we examined the cognitive and emotional content of MEAMs when older adults listened to autobiographical music. To
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Please don’t stop the music! A new look at the performance anxiety of musicians with the model of excellencism and perfectionism Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2025-01-08 Patrick Racine, Samuel Vachon Laflamme, Patrick Gaudreau, Frédéric Langlois
Musicians have normalized performance anxiety (PA) to be part of their musical career. Perfectionism has been proposed as a possible personality risk factor for PA. Although perfectionistic concerns have been consistently positively correlated to PA, results have been inconsistent for perfectionistic standards. This inconsistency is potentially attributable to the fact that past studies did not differentiate
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Online curriculum marketplaces and music education: A critical analysis of music activities on TeachersPayTeachers.com Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2025-01-04 Emmett J O’Leary, Julie K Bannerman
TeachersPayTeachers.com is an online marketplace where sellers offer learning activities, lesson plans, decorations, and related materials for use in school classrooms. The marketplace includes thousands of music education materials that are used by teachers throughout the United States. The purpose of this study was to explore the content of what is sold, who is selling materials on the platform,
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2024 Senior Researcher Award Acceptance Address: Perspectives that the Passage of Time Allows Journal of Research in Music Education (IF 1.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-04 Christopher M. Johnson
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Introduction to the 2024 Senior Researcher Award Acceptance Address Journal of Research in Music Education (IF 1.2) Pub Date : 2025-01-03 Wendy L. Sims
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Gender representation in undergraduate music technology education: case studies from Aotearoa/New Zealand Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.0) Pub Date : 2025-01-03 Catherine Hoad, Henry Johnson, Megan Rogerson-Berry, Oli Wilson, Josh Ellery
This article explores the relationship between gender inequities in undergraduate music technology education and the widespread imbalances that permeate the professional music technology workforce. We present evidence concerning the relationship between tertiary training and industry outcomes by focusing on three music technology degree-level offerings in Aotearoa/New Zealand. In doing so, we critically
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The integration of musical contents in the classroom of the second cycle of early childhood education Int. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.3) Pub Date : 2024-12-27 Oliver Curbelo-González, Paula Hernández-Dionis, Cristina Martín Sanz, David Pérez-Jorge
Numerous studies have demonstrated the substantial advantages of integrating music education into the overall development of students, particularly in early childhood education. This integration allows for combining music education with various curriculum areas, utilizing its playful and motivating nature as a practical methodological tool for developing a wide range of skills. This study examines
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The development of a resistance to school music scale Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-24 Alican Gülle, Nezaket Bilge Uzun, Cenk Akay
This study aimed to develop a valid and reliable measurement tool measuring secondary school students’ resistance to school music. Construct and content validity studies based on expert reviews, principal component analysis, confirmatory factor analysis, convergent validity, divergent validity, and Horn’s parallel analysis were conducted to provide additional evidence within the scope of the study
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The important role of self in cross-cultural investigations of affective experiences with music Psychology of Music (IF 1.6) Pub Date : 2024-12-24 Jonathan Tang
In the last decade, the construct of ‘culture’ was featured very prominently in music cognition research. However, researchers have adopted a narrow conceptualisation and a limited repertoire of methodologies when investigating ‘culture’. The purpose of this article is to expand on recommendations of Jacoby et al. and propose a novel approach to cross-cultural investigations of affective experiences