Musical friends and foes: The social cognition of affiliation and control in improvised interactions

Cognition 161:94-108 (2017)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

A recently emerging view in music cognition holds that music is not only social and participatory in its production, but also in its perception, i.e. that music is in fact perceived as the sonic trace of social rela- tions between a group of real or virtual agents. While this view appears compatible with a number of intriguing music cognitive phenomena, such as the links between beat entrainment and prosocial behaviour or between strong musical emotions and empathy, direct evidence is lacking that listeners are at all able to use the acoustic features of a musical interaction to infer the affiliatory or controlling nature of an underlying social intention. We created a novel experimental situation in which we asked expert music improvisers to communicate 5 types of non-musical social intentions, such as being domineering, dis- dainful or conciliatory, to one another solely using musical interaction. Using a combination of decoding studies, computational and psychoacoustical analyses, we show that both musically-trained and non musically-trained listeners can recognize relational intentions encoded in music, and that this social cognitive ability relies, to a sizeable extent, on the information processing of acoustic cues of temporal and harmonic coordination that are not present in any one of the musicians’ channels, but emerge from the dynamics of their interaction. By manipulating these cues in two-channel audio recordings and testing their impact on the social judgements of non-musician observers, we finally establish a causal relationship between the affiliation dimension of social behaviour and musical harmonic coordination on the one hand, and between the control dimension and musical temporal coordination on the other hand. These results provide novel mechanistic insights not only into the social cognition of musical interactions, but also into that of non-verbal interactions as a whole.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,386

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Strauss and Christianity: Friends or Foes?Cecilia R. Castillo - 2009 - Catholic Social Science Review 14:35-41.
Newton, his Friends and his Foes.A. Rupert Hall & D. Bertoloni Meli - 1995 - Annals of Science 52 (2):199-199.
Esthétique et cognition.Jean-Marc Chouvel & Xavier Hascher (eds.) - 2013 - Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne.
Mythical and Logical Thinking : Friends or Foes ?Michael Pomedli - 1986 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 42 (3):377-387.
Friends and Foes in Environmental Ethics: Poles Apart?John Patterson - 1997 - South Pacific Journal of Philosophy and Culture 2.

Analytics

Added to PP
2017-02-07

Downloads
32 (#488,786)

6 months
16 (#149,885)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Author's Profile