Do Picardy thirds smile? Tonal hierarchy and tonal valence: explicit and implicit measures (2103.09709v1)
Abstract: Western tonality provides a hierarchy of stability among melodic scale-degrees, from the maximally stable tonic to unstable chromatic notes. Tonal stability has been linked to emotion, yet systematic investigations of the associations between the hierarchy of melodic scale-degrees and perceived emotional valence are lacking. Here, we examined such associations in three experiments, in musicians and in non-musicians. We used an explicit task, in which participants matched probe tones following key-establishing sequences to facial expressions ranging from sad to happy, and an implicit speeded task, a variant of the Implicit Association Test. Stabler scale-degrees were associated with more positive valence in all experiments, for both musicians and nonmusicians. This notwithstanding, results significantly differed from those of a comparable goodness-of-fit task, suggesting that perceived tonal valence is not reducible to tonal fit. Comparisons of the explicit and implicit measures suggest that associations of tonality and emotional valence may rely on two distinct mechanisms, one mediated by conceptual musical knowledge and conscious decisional processes, the other - largely by non-conceptual and involuntary processes. The joint experimental paradigms introduced here may help mapping additional connotative meanings, both emotional and cross-modal, embedded in tonal structure, thus suggesting how extra-musical meanings are conveyed to listeners through musical syntax.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.