Mozart Effect in Musical Fit? A Commentary on Yeoh & North

Musical fit, the congruence between music and product leading to improved response, is presented as an explanation of differences in recall of food items from two cultures. Musical fit predicts that, in this case, more Indian food items would be recalled when Indian music was playing, and more Malay...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Emery Schubert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Ohio State University Libraries 2010-04-01
Series:Empirical Musicology Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://kb.osu.edu/dspace/handle/1811/45169
id doaj-73b002a9e71e43feabb1d54d7c5f0a5c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-73b002a9e71e43feabb1d54d7c5f0a5c2020-11-24T23:12:02ZengThe Ohio State University LibrariesEmpirical Musicology Review1559-57492010-04-0151182210.18061/1811/45169Mozart Effect in Musical Fit? A Commentary on Yeoh & NorthEmery SchubertMusical fit, the congruence between music and product leading to improved response, is presented as an explanation of differences in recall of food items from two cultures. Musical fit predicts that, in this case, more Indian food items would be recalled when Indian music was playing, and more Malay food items would be recalled when Malay music was played. The underlining premise of this prediction is priming (the music primes memories of associated food items, facilitating recall). The testing was performed using three ethnic groups of participants, Indian, Malay, and Chinese. The priming effects were only identified among the Chinese group. A reanalysis of the data presented here indicates that the overall recall of food items is best facilitated by Indian music, regardless of whether the food item is Indian or Malay, and further, each ethnicity reported more items in the Indian music condition. The Mozart effect was also based on the premise of priming activation and was later debunked in favor of an arousal-mood hypothesis. This commentary discusses whether arousal-mood, a more generalized activation leading to improved performance than priming, might better explain the results. While priming and congruence more plausibly explains musical fit than the Mozart effect, the possibility of testing other hypotheses are considered worthwhile.https://kb.osu.edu/dspace/handle/1811/45169musical fitprimingarousal-moodMozart effect
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emery Schubert
spellingShingle Emery Schubert
Mozart Effect in Musical Fit? A Commentary on Yeoh & North
Empirical Musicology Review
musical fit
priming
arousal-mood
Mozart effect
author_facet Emery Schubert
author_sort Emery Schubert
title Mozart Effect in Musical Fit? A Commentary on Yeoh & North
title_short Mozart Effect in Musical Fit? A Commentary on Yeoh & North
title_full Mozart Effect in Musical Fit? A Commentary on Yeoh & North
title_fullStr Mozart Effect in Musical Fit? A Commentary on Yeoh & North
title_full_unstemmed Mozart Effect in Musical Fit? A Commentary on Yeoh & North
title_sort mozart effect in musical fit? a commentary on yeoh & north
publisher The Ohio State University Libraries
series Empirical Musicology Review
issn 1559-5749
publishDate 2010-04-01
description Musical fit, the congruence between music and product leading to improved response, is presented as an explanation of differences in recall of food items from two cultures. Musical fit predicts that, in this case, more Indian food items would be recalled when Indian music was playing, and more Malay food items would be recalled when Malay music was played. The underlining premise of this prediction is priming (the music primes memories of associated food items, facilitating recall). The testing was performed using three ethnic groups of participants, Indian, Malay, and Chinese. The priming effects were only identified among the Chinese group. A reanalysis of the data presented here indicates that the overall recall of food items is best facilitated by Indian music, regardless of whether the food item is Indian or Malay, and further, each ethnicity reported more items in the Indian music condition. The Mozart effect was also based on the premise of priming activation and was later debunked in favor of an arousal-mood hypothesis. This commentary discusses whether arousal-mood, a more generalized activation leading to improved performance than priming, might better explain the results. While priming and congruence more plausibly explains musical fit than the Mozart effect, the possibility of testing other hypotheses are considered worthwhile.
topic musical fit
priming
arousal-mood
Mozart effect
url https://kb.osu.edu/dspace/handle/1811/45169
work_keys_str_mv AT emeryschubert mozarteffectinmusicalfitacommentaryonyeohnorth
_version_ 1725602710602907648