Groovin’ to the cultural beat: Preferences for danceable music represent cultural affordances for high-arousal negative emotions

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Liew, Kongmeng;Koh, Alethea H.Q.;Fram, Noah R.;Brown, Christina;dela Cruz, Cheslie;Lee, Li Neng;Hennequin, Romain;Krause, Amanda E.;Uchida, Yukiko
Abstract

Music is a product of culture. Cross-cultural examinations of music features can reveal novel information about the cultural psychological processes involved in shaping music preferences. In Studies 1 and 2, we first identified differences in music preferences through machine learning of East-Asian and Western popular music on Spotify (combined N = 1,006,644). In interpreting these results, we developed a theory on danceability as a music feature, that represents cultural affordances for high-arousal emotions. Subsequent confirmatory studies (Studies 3–5, combined Nsongs = 3,343, Nparticipants = 495, Ncountries = 60) tested this theory by examining danceability and the role of emotion in music preferences. Specifically, we found that danceability represents cultural affordances for high-arousal negative (HAN) emotions: societies with greater HAN emotion prevalence generally prefer listening to more danceable music. Consistently, this was also observed more in independent individuals and culturally looser countries. Using evidence from Japanese and American participants (Study 5), we propose a mechanism through discharge regulation in music: cultures with looser cultural norms would also have more experiences of HAN emotions in daily life. Discharge regulation, which is listening to music to cathartically release HAN emotions, would then skew music preferences toward high-arousal (danceable) music to facilitate this cathartic HAN downregulation. These findings have implications for cross-cultural research by demonstrating that music features, being widely accessible and almost universally perceived, can quantify cultural tendencies toward affective (HAN emotion) norms beyond commonly used self-report paradigms.

Journal

Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts

Publication Name

N/A

Volume

N/A

ISBN/ISSN

1931-390X

Edition

N/A

Issue

N/A

Pages Count

16

Location

N/A

Publisher

American Psychological Association

Publisher Url

N/A

Publisher Location

N/A

Publish Date

N/A

Url

N/A

Date

N/A

EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1037/aca0000599