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Influencing the Perceived Emotions of Music with Intent

Livingstone, Steven R. and Brown, Andrew R. and Muhlberger, Ralf (2005) Influencing the Perceived Emotions of Music with Intent. In Innocent, Troy, Eds. Proceedings 3rd Iteration, pages pp. 161-170, Melbourne.

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Abstract

Music is an immensely powerful affective medium that pervades our everyday life. With ever advancing technology, the reproduction and application of music for emotive and information transfer purposes has never been more prevalent. In this paper we introduce a rule-based engine for influencing the perceived emotions of music. Based on empirical music psychology, we attempt to formalise the relationship between musical elements and their perceived emotion. We examine the modification to structural aspects of music to allow for a graduated transition between perceived emotive states. This mechanism is intended to provide music reproduction systems with a finer grained control over this affective medium; where perceived musical emotion can be influenced with intent. This intent comes from both an external application and the audience. Using a series of affective computing technologies, an audience’s response metrics and attitudes can be incorporated to model this intent. A generative feedback loop is set up between the external application, the influencing process and the audience’s response to this, which together shape the modification of musical structure. The effectiveness of influencing perceived musical emotion was examined in earlier work, with a small test study providing generally encouraging results.

Item Type:Conference Paper
Status:Published
Subjects:410000 The Arts > 410100 Performing Arts > 410101 Music
ID Code:9526
Deposited By:Brown, Andrew
Deposited On:17 September 2007
Alternative Locations:http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~iterate/TI/
Copyright Owner:Copyright 2005 (The authors)