Berklee
The Neuroscience of Music and Emotion
Berklee

The Neuroscience of Music and Emotion

Susan Rogers, PhD.

Instructor: Susan Rogers, PhD.

Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
Beginner level

Recommended experience

6 hours to complete
Flexible schedule
Learn at your own pace
Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
Beginner level

Recommended experience

6 hours to complete
Flexible schedule
Learn at your own pace

What you'll learn

  • Name the major lobes and pathways of the brain, and describe how auditory, motor and reward systems work together to perceive melody and rhythm.

  • Describe links between rhythm, tonality and appetite for novelty that mediate the emotional responses to music.

  • Define and describe emotional arousal versus valence, music-evoked chills, musical anhedonia, and how pleasure follows predictions.

  • List seven dimensions of musical pleasure and describe the listener profile.

Details to know

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Assessments

5 assignments

Taught in English

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There are 4 modules in this course

Welcome to The Neuroscience of Music and Emotion! This module includes what you need to know to get the most out of your Berklee massive online course. We start with the neuroanatomy of our brains to help you get familiar with the regions and structures that give rise to musical thoughts, performance gestures, and feelings. By the end of this lesson, you will be able to identify where pitch and timing cues are processed, describe the difference between the dorsal and ventral auditory pathways, and list the major nuclei of the dopaminergic reward system.

What's included

7 videos6 readings1 assignment2 discussion prompts

In lesson 2 we explore how musical taste forms through passive exposure to music in the environment. We start with rhythm perception: extracting a pulse from accented beats to predict upcoming musical events. Next, we look at tonality perception and how musical training strongly influences the sense of consonance and dissonance. Then we describe how some vocal melodies have a universal, culture-general function, like dancing, healing, and soothing infants. Finally, we see where our own preference for novel vs. familiar music relates to an appetite for aesthetic risk-taking. By the end of this lesson, you will be able to identify how musical tastes develop and what guides an individual to be open to (or not) new musical styles.

What's included

6 videos3 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt

In lesson 3 we discuss emotional responses to music. We start by defining what an emotion is and discuss why it depends on context. Then we define emotional arousal and valence in terms of musical features. For a better understanding of the range of emotional responses, we look at musical anhedonia (absence of pleasure from music) and its opposite: music-evoked chills. Next, we describe the three stages of emotion generation caused by music and the processes involved. Finally, we look at why most listeners get a good feeling from sad songs. By the end of this lesson, you will have a better understanding of what composers and songwriters can expect if they want their music to generate an emotional response in a listener.

What's included

6 videos3 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt

In our final lesson we describe the listener profile: the uniqueness of each person’s response to music. We start with differentiating between liking and wanting to learn how a simple hedonic response (“I like that”) differs from a strongly motivated desire to acquire something (“I must hear that again!”). We see how rapidly listeners make judgments of liking vs. disliking some musical styles. Next, we look at bonding to music in adolescence to learn why adults tend to have a “reminiscence bump” for the music of their teenage years. This leads to how our favorite music activates the “default network,” encouraging our brain to mind-wander or daydream during enjoyment. Finally, we illustrate the listening brain in its search for the rewards found in the musical elements of melody, lyrics, rhythm, and timbre, or the aesthetic elements of novelty, authenticity, and realism. We summarize how a listener’s internal conditions and external context ultimately work together to determine music-evoked emotional responding.

What's included

7 videos3 readings2 assignments1 discussion prompt

Instructor

Susan Rogers, PhD.
Berklee
0 Courses0 learners

Offered by

Berklee

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