Physiological audience synchrony in classical concerts linked with listeners' experiences and attitudes.

Tschacher, Wolfgang; Greenwood, Steven; Weining, Christian; Wald-Fuhrmann, Melanie; Ramakrishnan, Chandrasekhar; Seibert, Christoph; Tröndle, Martin (2024). Physiological audience synchrony in classical concerts linked with listeners' experiences and attitudes. Scientific Reports, 14(16412) Nature Publishing Group 10.1038/s41598-024-67455-2

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A series of eleven public concerts (staging chamber music by Ludwig van Beethoven, Brett Dean, Johannes Brahms) was organized with the goal to analyze physiological synchronies within the audiences and associations of synchrony with psychological variables. We hypothesized that the music would induce synchronized physiology, which would be linked to participants' aesthetic experiences, affect, and personality traits. Physiological measures (cardiac, electrodermal, respiration) of 695 participants were recorded during presentations. Before and after concerts, questionnaires provided self-report scales and standardized measures of participants' affectivity, personality traits, aesthetic experiences and listening modes. Synchrony was computed by a cross-correlational algorithm to obtain, for each participant and physiological variable (heart rate, heart-rate variability, respiration rate, respiration, skin-conductance response), how much each individual participant contributed to overall audience synchrony. In hierarchical models, such synchrony contribution was used as the dependent and the various self-report scales as predictor variables. We found that physiology throughout audiences was significantly synchronized, as expected with the exception of breathing behavior. There were links between synchrony and affectivity. Personality moderated the synchrony levels: Openness was positively associated, Extraversion and Neuroticism negatively. Several factors of experiences and listening modes predicted synchrony. Emotional listening was associated with reduced, whereas both structual and sound-focused listening was associated with increased synchrony. We concluded with an updated, nuanced understanding of synchrony on the timescale of whole concerts, inviting elaboration by synchony studies on shorter timescales of music passages.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

UniBE Contributor:

Tschacher, Wolfgang

ISSN:

2045-2322

Publisher:

Nature Publishing Group

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

17 Jul 2024 09:59

Last Modified:

18 Jul 2024 07:07

Publisher DOI:

10.1038/s41598-024-67455-2

PubMed ID:

39013995

Uncontrolled Keywords:

Aesthetic experience Classical concerts Listening modes Physiological synchrony Surrogate synchrony (SUSY)

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/199050

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/199050

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