Search results for "human-music interaction"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Pleasant Musical Imagery : Eliciting Cherished Music in the Second Person

2019

This article introduces the notion of pleasant musical imagery (PMI) for denoting everyday phenomena where people want to cherish music ‘‘in their heads.’’ This account differs from current paradigms for studying musical imagery in that it is not based a priori on (in)voluntariness of the experience. An empirical investigation of the structure and experiential content in 50 persons’ experiences of PMI applied the elicitation interview method. Peer judgments of the interviews helped to bridge a phenomenological investigation of particular experiences with systematic between-subjects analysis. Both structural features of the imagery (e.g., Looseness of structure or Looping) and content featur…

mielikuvathuman-music interactionmusiikkimusical imageryenactive processesevokatiivinen vuorovaikutusevocativenesselicitation interviewenaktiivisuus
researchProduct

Identifying the Impact of Game Music both Within and Beyond Gameplay

2021

This paper presents an overview of and a brief critical reflection on game music’s impact on players both within and beyond the context of gameplay. The analysis is based both on the current literature as well as on preliminary (work-in-progress) observations of our research project Game Music Everyday Memories. We consider how the functions and uses of game music potentially extend to people’s everyday life, thus constituting a personally and culturally meaningful relationship with music that is not immediately connected to gameplay. On the other hand, we consider the ways game music and a person’s attachment to the music are involved in gameplay motivation and potential game retention. As…

muistotCognitive scienceComputer sciencehuman-music interactionComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTINGmusiikkipsykologiaContext (language use)MusicalpelikulttuurimemoriesimpactNarrativepelimusiikkiCritical reflectionEveryday lifePotential gamegame music
researchProduct