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Music-color associations are mediated by emotion

Identifieur interne : 000014 ( PascalFrancis/Corpus ); précédent : 000013; suivant : 000015

Music-color associations are mediated by emotion

Auteurs : Stephen E. Palmer ; Karen B. Schloss ; Zoe Xu ; Lilia R. Prado-Leon

Source :

RBID : Francis:14-0012702

Descripteurs français

English descriptors

Abstract

Experimental evidence demonstrates robust cross-modal matches between music and colors that are mediated by emotional associations. US and Mexican participants chose colors that were most/least consistent with 18 selections of classical orchestral music by Bach, Mozart, and Brahms. In both cultures, faster music in the major mode produced color choices that were more saturated, lighter, and yellower whereas slower, minor music produced the opposite pattern (choices that were desaturated, darker, and bluer). There were strong correlations (0.89 < r < 0.99) between the emotional associations of the music and those of the colors chosen to go with the music, supporting an emotional mediation hypothesis in both cultures. Additional experiments showed similarly robust cross-modal matches from emotionally expressive faces to colors and from music to emotionally expressive faces. These results provide further support that music-to-color associations are mediated by common emotional associations.

Notice en format standard (ISO 2709)

Pour connaître la documentation sur le format Inist Standard.

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A11 02  1    @1 SCHLOSS (Karen B.)
A11 03  1    @1 XU (Zoe)
A11 04  1    @1 PRADO-LEON (Lilia R.)
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Format Inist (serveur)

NO : FRANCIS 14-0012702 INIST
ET : Music-color associations are mediated by emotion
AU : PALMER (Stephen E.); SCHLOSS (Karen B.); XU (Zoe); PRADO-LEON (Lilia R.)
AF : Psychology Department, University of California/Berkeley, CA 94720/Etats-Unis (1 aut., 2 aut., 3 aut.); Ergonomics Research Center, University Center of Art, Architecture, and Design, University of Guadalajara/Guadalajara, Jalisco, 44250/Mexique (4 aut.)
DT : Publication en série; Niveau analytique
SO : Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America; ISSN 0027-8424; Coden PNASA6; Etats-Unis; Da. 2013; Vol. 110; No. 22; Pp. 8836-8841; Bibl. 32 ref.
LA : Anglais
EA : Experimental evidence demonstrates robust cross-modal matches between music and colors that are mediated by emotional associations. US and Mexican participants chose colors that were most/least consistent with 18 selections of classical orchestral music by Bach, Mozart, and Brahms. In both cultures, faster music in the major mode produced color choices that were more saturated, lighter, and yellower whereas slower, minor music produced the opposite pattern (choices that were desaturated, darker, and bluer). There were strong correlations (0.89 < r < 0.99) between the emotional associations of the music and those of the colors chosen to go with the music, supporting an emotional mediation hypothesis in both cultures. Additional experiments showed similarly robust cross-modal matches from emotionally expressive faces to colors and from music to emotionally expressive faces. These results provide further support that music-to-color associations are mediated by common emotional associations.
CC : 770B07F; 770B05H
FD : Etude expérimentale; Perception intermodale; Audition; Musique; Vision; Couleur; Emotion émotivité; Homme
FG : Cognition; Perception; Affect affectivité
ED : Experimental study; Intermodal perception; Hearing; Music; Vision; Color; Emotion emotionality; Human
EG : Cognition; Perception; Affect affectivity
SD : Estudio experimental; Percepción intermodal; Audición; Música; Visión; Color; Emoción emotividad; Hombre
LO : INIST-574.354000509068670190
ID : 14-0012702

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Francis:14-0012702

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<SO>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America; ISSN 0027-8424; Coden PNASA6; Etats-Unis; Da. 2013; Vol. 110; No. 22; Pp. 8836-8841; Bibl. 32 ref.</SO>
<LA>Anglais</LA>
<EA>Experimental evidence demonstrates robust cross-modal matches between music and colors that are mediated by emotional associations. US and Mexican participants chose colors that were most/least consistent with 18 selections of classical orchestral music by Bach, Mozart, and Brahms. In both cultures, faster music in the major mode produced color choices that were more saturated, lighter, and yellower whereas slower, minor music produced the opposite pattern (choices that were desaturated, darker, and bluer). There were strong correlations (0.89 < r < 0.99) between the emotional associations of the music and those of the colors chosen to go with the music, supporting an emotional mediation hypothesis in both cultures. Additional experiments showed similarly robust cross-modal matches from emotionally expressive faces to colors and from music to emotionally expressive faces. These results provide further support that music-to-color associations are mediated by common emotional associations.</EA>
<CC>770B07F; 770B05H</CC>
<FD>Etude expérimentale; Perception intermodale; Audition; Musique; Vision; Couleur; Emotion émotivité; Homme</FD>
<FG>Cognition; Perception; Affect affectivité</FG>
<ED>Experimental study; Intermodal perception; Hearing; Music; Vision; Color; Emotion emotionality; Human</ED>
<EG>Cognition; Perception; Affect affectivity</EG>
<SD>Estudio experimental; Percepción intermodal; Audición; Música; Visión; Color; Emoción emotividad; Hombre</SD>
<LO>INIST-574.354000509068670190</LO>
<ID>14-0012702</ID>
</server>
</inist>
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