Neurophysiological Investigation of Context Modulation based on Musical Stimulus 🌎✈


Conference paper


Siddharth Mehrotra, Anuj Shukla, Dipanjan Roy
ICMPC: 14th biennial International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition, ICMPC14, 2016, pp. 243--246

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APA   Click to copy
Mehrotra, S., Shukla, A., & Roy, D. (2016). Neurophysiological Investigation of Context Modulation based on Musical Stimulus 🌎✈. In ICMPC: 14th biennial International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition (pp. 243–246). ICMPC14.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Mehrotra, Siddharth, Anuj Shukla, and Dipanjan Roy. “Neurophysiological Investigation of Context Modulation Based on Musical Stimulus 🌎✈.” In ICMPC: 14th Biennial International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition, 243–246. ICMPC14, 2016.


MLA   Click to copy
Mehrotra, Siddharth, et al. “Neurophysiological Investigation of Context Modulation Based on Musical Stimulus 🌎✈.” ICMPC: 14th Biennial International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition, ICMPC14, 2016, pp. 243–46.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@inproceedings{mehrotra2016a,
  title = {Neurophysiological Investigation of Context Modulation based on Musical Stimulus 🌎✈},
  year = {2016},
  organization = {ICMPC14},
  pages = {243--246},
  author = {Mehrotra, Siddharth and Shukla, Anuj and Roy, Dipanjan},
  booktitle = {ICMPC: 14th biennial International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition}
}

 
SEMPRE Travel Award
Abstract:
There are numerous studies which suggest that perhaps music is truly the language of emotions. Music seems to have an almost willful, evasive quality, defying simple explanation, and indeed requires deeper neurophysiological investigations to gain a better understanding. The current study makes an attempt in that direction to explore the effect of context on music perception. To investigate the same, we measured Galvanic Skin Responses (GSR) and self-reported emotion on 18 participants while listening to different Ragas (musical stimulus) composed of different Rasa’s (emotional expression) in the different context (Neutral, Pleasant, and Unpleasant). The IAPS pictures were used to induce the emotional context in participants. Our results from this study suggest that the context can modulate emotional response in music perception but only for a shorter time scale. Interestingly, here we demonstrate by combining GSR and self-reports that this effect gradually vanishes over time and shows emotional adaptation irrespective of context. The overall findings suggest that specific context effects of music perception are transitory in nature and gets saturated on a longer time scale. 

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