Effects of pitch and musical sounds on body-representations when moving with sound

Author:

Ley-Flores Judith,Alshami Eslam,Singh Aneesha,Bevilacqua Frédéric,Bianchi-Berthouze Nadia,Deroy Ophelia,Tajadura-Jiménez Ana

Abstract

AbstractThe effects of music on bodily movement and feelings, such as when people are dancing or engaged in physical activity, are well-documented—people may move in response to the sound cues, feel powerful, less tired. How sounds and bodily movements relate to create such effects? Here we deconstruct the problem and investigate how different auditory features affect people’s body-representation and feelings even when paired with the same movement. In three experiments, participants executed a simple arm raise synchronised with changing pitch in simple tones (Experiment 1), rich musical sounds (Experiment 2) and within different frequency ranges (Experiment 3), while we recorded indirect and direct measures on their movement, body-representations and feelings. Changes in pitch influenced people’s general emotional state as well as the various bodily dimensions investigated—movement, proprioceptive awareness and feelings about one’s body and movement. Adding harmonic content amplified the differences between ascending and descending sounds, while shifting the absolute frequency range had a general effect on movement amplitude, bodily feelings and emotional state. These results provide new insights in the role of auditory and musical features in dance and exercise, and have implications for the design of sound-based applications supporting movement expression, physical activity, or rehabilitation.

Funder

Doctoral training grant

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Volkswagen Foundation

Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad, Gobierno de España

The Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigación

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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