Listening to music can improve someone’s unconscious attitudes towards other cultural groups.

Listening to music can improve unconscious attitudes towards other cultures

Listening to five minutes of West African or Indian pop music can give the listener more positive attitudes towards those cultures, research from the Universities of Oxford and Exeter has found.

Research had previously shown that making music can foster affiliation and cooperation among participants, but this study shows that even listening to music can improve someone’s unconscious attitudes towards other cultural groups.

Music psychologists Professor Eric Clarke and Dr Jonna Vuoskoski from the University of Oxford and sociologist of music Professor Tia DeNora from the University of Exeter used a method called the Implicit Association Test to measure the change in listeners’ unconscious cultural bias after listening to a single track of West African or Indian pop music.

They found a shift in positive feelings towards the target culture – though not all listeners were equally affected by the music: people with an empathic personality were more susceptible to the effects of music, while those who scored low in empathy remained unaffected.

Professor DeNora said: "We're learning more all the time about how music conditions predispositions for action. And that means learning more about what music can, and cannot do. Understanding how music perception is shaped by social and situational factors, and how responses to music involve often pre-conscious cultural reflexes, is one of the most intriguing projects for socio-musical research today, perhaps especially at a time when values such as tolerance and empathy have never been more urgent."

“Music performs a whole range of psychological and social functions, bringing people together in powerful ways, and shaping people’s emotions and behaviours,” said Professor Eric Clarke of the Music Faculty at Oxford University.

“And it’s important to recognize that music can also be very divisive. But at a time of increasing nationalism and isolationism, the findings of our study provide encouraging evidence for music’s capacity to increase cultural understanding.

“Music is no ‘magic bullet’ that automatically overcomes barriers and brings people together; a degree of openness and empathy is also required,' added Dr Jonna Vuoskoski.

The research was funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council and published in the journal Psychology of Music.

 

Date: 15 February 2017