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Neonatal Musicality: Do Newborns Detect Emotions in Music?

Authors :
Emese Nagy
Rachael Cosgrove
Naomi Robertson
Theresa Einhoff
Hajnalka Orvos
Source :
Psychological Studies. 67:501-513
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

This study aimed to explore healthy, term neonates’ behavioural and physiological responses to music using frame-by-frame analysis of their movements (Experiment 1; N = 32, 0–3 days old) and heart rate measurements (Experiment 2; N = 66, 0–6 days old). A ‘happy’ and ‘sad’ music was first validated by independent raters for their emotional content from a large pool of children’s songs and lullabies, and the effect of the emotions in these two music pieces and a control, no-music condition was compared. The results of the frame-by-frame behavioural analysis showed that babies had emotion-specific responses across the three conditions. Happy music decreased their arousal levels, shifting from drowsiness to sleep, and resulted in longer latencies in other forms of self-regulatory behaviour, such as sucking. The decrease in arousal was accompanied by heart rate deceleration. In the sad music condition, relative ‘stillness’ was observed, and longer leg stretching latencies were measured. In both music conditions, longer latencies of fine motor finger and toe movements were found. Our findings suggest that the emotional response to music possibly emerges very early ontogenetically as part of a generic, possibly inborn, human musicality.

Details

ISSN :
09749861 and 00332968
Volume :
67
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychological Studies
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5e9f8ffb0bc79590b4a7af1334a88f63
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12646-022-00688-1