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The role of structure in the musical expression of emotions

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The article was published on 2010-01-01. It has received 266 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Musical expression.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Musical emotions: predicting second-by-second subjective feelings of emotion from low-level psychoacoustic features and physiological measurements.

TL;DR: A significant part of the listeners' reported emotions can be predicted from a set of six psychoacoustic features--loudness, pitch level, pitch contour, tempo, texture, and sharpness--and the accuracy of those predictions is improved with the inclusion of physiological cues--skin conductance and heart rate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emotional and psychophysiological responses to tempo, mode, and percussiveness

TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of the musical characteristics of tempo, mode and percussiveness on the emotional states of participants listening to 16 pop and 16 rock songs while conducting an office task was investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smart environment architecture for emotion detection and regulation.

TL;DR: An architecture as a proof-of-concept for emotion detection and regulation in smart health environments to detect the patient's emotional state by analysing his/her physiological signals, facial expression and behaviour and provides the best-tailored actions in the environment to regulate these emotions towards a positive mood when possible.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychoacoustic cues to emotion in speech prosody and music

TL;DR: It is shown that a significant part of the listeners’ second-by-second reported emotions to music and speech prosody can be predicted from a set of seven psychoacoustic features: loudness, tempo/speech rate, melody/prosody contour, spectral centroid, spectral flux, sharpness, and roughness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emotional expression in music: contribution, linearity, and additivity of primary musical cues.

TL;DR: The main result suggested that most cue levels contributed to the emotions in a linear fashion, explaining 77–89% of variance in ratings, corroborating recent findings on emotional expression in music.
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