Edith Van Dyck
Ghent University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Edith Van Dyck.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Jeska Buhmann; Frank Desmet; Bart Moens; Edith Van Dyck; Marc Leman
The expressive features of music can influence the velocity of walking. So far, studies used instructed (and intended) synchronization. But is this velocity effect still present with non-instructed (spontaneous) synchronization? To figure that out, participants were instructed to walk in their own comfort tempo on an indoor track, first in silence and then with tempo-matched music. We compared velocities of silence and music conditions. The results show that some music has an activating influence, increasing velocity and motivation, while other music has a relaxing influence, decreasing velocity and motivation. The influence of musical expression on the velocity of self-paced walking can be predicted with a regression model using only three sonic features explaining 56% of the variance. Phase-coherence between footfall and beat did not contribute to the velocity effect, due to its implied fixed pacing. The findings suggest that the velocity effect depends on vigor entrainment that influences both stride length and pacing. Our findings are relevant for preventing injuries, for gait improvement in walking rehabilitation, and for improving performance in sports activities.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Edith Van Dyck; Pieter Vansteenkiste; Matthieu Lenoir; Micheline Lesaffre; Marc Leman
Recent research revealed that emotional content can be successfully decoded from human dance movement. Most previous studies made use of videos of actors or dancers portraying emotions through choreography. The current study applies emotion induction techniques and free movement in order to examine the recognition of emotional content from dance. Observers (N = 30) watched a set of silent videos showing depersonalized avatars of dancers moving to an emotionally neutral musical stimulus after emotions of either sadness or happiness had been induced. Each of the video clips consisted of two dance performances which were presented side-by-side and were played simultaneously; one of a dancer in the happy condition and one of the same individual in the sad condition. After every film clip, the observers were asked to make forced-choices concerning the emotional state of the dancer. Results revealed that observers were able to identify the emotional state of the dancers with a high degree of accuracy. Moreover, emotions were more often recognized for female dancers than for their male counterparts. In addition, the results of eye tracking measurements unveiled that observers primarily focus on movements of the chest when decoding emotional information from dance movement. The findings of our study show that not merely portrayed emotions, but also induced emotions can be successfully recognized from free dance movement.
Musicae Scientiae | 2017
Edith Van Dyck; Joren Six; Esin Nisa Soyer; Marlies Denys; Ilka Bardijn; Marc Leman
Music is frequently used as a means of relaxation. Conversely, it is used as a means of arousal in sports and exercise contexts. Previous research suggests that tempo is one of the most significant determinants of music-related arousal and relaxation effects. Here we investigate the specific effect of music tempo, but also more generally, the influence of music on human heart rate. We took the pulses of 32 participants in silence, and then we played them non-vocal, ambient music at a tempo corresponding to their heart rates. Finally, we played the same music again, either with the tempo increased or decreased by a factor of 45%, 30%, or 15%; or maintaining the same tempo as in the first playing. Mixed-design ANOVA tests revealed a significant increase in heart rate while listening to the music as compared with silence (p < .05). In addition, substantial decreases in tempo (-45% or -30%) could account for smaller subsequent heart rate reductions (p < .05). We neither found links between increases in tempo (+15%, +30%, and +45%) and heart rate change, nor small decreases (-15%). In addition, neither effects of gender, music training, nor of musical preference were found. This indicates that during passive music listening, music exerts a general arousal effect on human heart rate, which might be regulated by tempo. These results are a major contribution to the way in which music may be used in everyday activities.
Springer handbook of systematic musicology | 2018
Marc Leman; Pieter-Jan Maes; Luc Nijs; Edith Van Dyck
Over the past decade, embodied music cognition has become an influential paradigm in music research. The paradigm holds that music cognition is strongly determined by corporeally mediated interactions with music. They determine the way in which music can be conceived in terms of goals, directions, targets, values, and reward. The chapter gives an overview of the ontological and epistemological foundations, and it introduces the core concepts that define the character of the paradigm. This is followed by an overview of some analytical and empirical studies, which illustrate contributions of the embodied music cognition approach to major topics in musical expression, timing, and prediction processing. The chapter gives a viewpoint on a music research paradigm that is in full development, both in view of the in-depth refinement of its foundations, as well as the broadening of its scope and applications.
Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal | 2013
Edith Van Dyck; Dirk Moelants; Michiel Demey; Alexander Deweppe; Pieter Coussement; Marc Leman
Sports Medicine - Open | 2015
Edith Van Dyck; Bart Moens; Jeska Buhmann; Michiel Demey; Esther Coorevits; Simone Dalla Bella; Marc Leman
Journal of Nonverbal Behavior | 2013
Edith Van Dyck; Pieter-Jan Maes; Jonathan Hargreaves; Micheline Lesaffre; Marc Leman
Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal | 2014
Pieter-Jan Maes; Edith Van Dyck; Micheline Lesaffre; Marc Leman; Pieter M. Kroonenberg
Proceedings of the 11th international conference on music perception and cognition (ICMPC 11) | 2010
Edith Van Dyck; Dirk Moelants; Michiel Demey; Pieter Coussement; Alexander Deweppe; Marc Leman
Sports Medicine - Open | 2015
Edith Van Dyck; Bart Moens; Jeska Buhmann; Michiel Demey; Esther Coorevits; Simone Dalla Bella; Marc Leman