Toward Predicting Prosocial Behavior: Music Preference and Empathy Differences Between Adolescents and Adults

Empathy plays a role in social competence and intelligence, and can serve as a buffer against antisocial tendencies. Numerous studies highlight the relationship between empathy, prosocial behaviors, and the predictive utility of music preferences. This study examined participant differences in music...

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Main Authors: Shannon Scott Clark, S. Giac Giacomantonio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Ohio State University Libraries 2015-09-01
Series:Empirical Musicology Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18061/emr.v10i1-2.4602
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spelling doaj-94a34c723ecf4022a77c143549b3a01a2020-11-25T00:24:43ZengThe Ohio State University LibrariesEmpirical Musicology Review1559-57492015-09-01101-2506510.18061/emr.v10i1-2.4602Toward Predicting Prosocial Behavior: Music Preference and Empathy Differences Between Adolescents and AdultsShannon Scott Clark0S. Giac Giacomantonio1Australian Catholic UniversityUniversity of QueenslandEmpathy plays a role in social competence and intelligence, and can serve as a buffer against antisocial tendencies. Numerous studies highlight the relationship between empathy, prosocial behaviors, and the predictive utility of music preferences. This study examined participant differences in music preferences and empathy as a function of age, and whether preferred music genre predicted empathy (as a correlate to prosocial behavior). A new measure was devised to assess music preferences more accurately (i.e. with better face/construct validity) than existing measures. The Basic Empathy Scale measured empathy as a multidimensional construct. Younger participants exhibited greater empathy than older ones. Each music preference factor contributed uniquely to empathy variance in multiple regression models. Younger and older participants differed on music preferences (arguably associated with age-related sociocultural influences). Conclusions were drawn regarding the age differences in empathy and music preferences, the systematically greater influences of music preferences on cognitive compared to affective empathy, and the greater associations with empathy of specific music preferences. Limitations and implications for government policy and further research are considered.https://doi.org/10.18061/emr.v10i1-2.4602music preferencesage comparisonsempathylyrical influence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shannon Scott Clark
S. Giac Giacomantonio
spellingShingle Shannon Scott Clark
S. Giac Giacomantonio
Toward Predicting Prosocial Behavior: Music Preference and Empathy Differences Between Adolescents and Adults
Empirical Musicology Review
music preferences
age comparisons
empathy
lyrical influence
author_facet Shannon Scott Clark
S. Giac Giacomantonio
author_sort Shannon Scott Clark
title Toward Predicting Prosocial Behavior: Music Preference and Empathy Differences Between Adolescents and Adults
title_short Toward Predicting Prosocial Behavior: Music Preference and Empathy Differences Between Adolescents and Adults
title_full Toward Predicting Prosocial Behavior: Music Preference and Empathy Differences Between Adolescents and Adults
title_fullStr Toward Predicting Prosocial Behavior: Music Preference and Empathy Differences Between Adolescents and Adults
title_full_unstemmed Toward Predicting Prosocial Behavior: Music Preference and Empathy Differences Between Adolescents and Adults
title_sort toward predicting prosocial behavior: music preference and empathy differences between adolescents and adults
publisher The Ohio State University Libraries
series Empirical Musicology Review
issn 1559-5749
publishDate 2015-09-01
description Empathy plays a role in social competence and intelligence, and can serve as a buffer against antisocial tendencies. Numerous studies highlight the relationship between empathy, prosocial behaviors, and the predictive utility of music preferences. This study examined participant differences in music preferences and empathy as a function of age, and whether preferred music genre predicted empathy (as a correlate to prosocial behavior). A new measure was devised to assess music preferences more accurately (i.e. with better face/construct validity) than existing measures. The Basic Empathy Scale measured empathy as a multidimensional construct. Younger participants exhibited greater empathy than older ones. Each music preference factor contributed uniquely to empathy variance in multiple regression models. Younger and older participants differed on music preferences (arguably associated with age-related sociocultural influences). Conclusions were drawn regarding the age differences in empathy and music preferences, the systematically greater influences of music preferences on cognitive compared to affective empathy, and the greater associations with empathy of specific music preferences. Limitations and implications for government policy and further research are considered.
topic music preferences
age comparisons
empathy
lyrical influence
url https://doi.org/10.18061/emr.v10i1-2.4602
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