Timo Fischinger
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Timo Fischinger.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2015
Paul Elvers; Diana Omigie; Wolfgang Fuhrmann; Timo Fischinger
Musicology students are engaged with music on an academic level and usually have an extensive musical background. They have a considerable knowledge of music history and theory and listening to music may be regarded as one of their primary occupations. Taken together, these factors qualify them as ≫expert listeners≪, who may be expected to exhibit a specific profile of musical taste: interest in a broad range of musical styles combined with a greater appreciation of ≫sophisticated≪ styles. The current study examined the musical taste of musicology students as compared to a control student group. Participants (n = 1003) completed an online survey regarding the frequency with which they listened to 22 musical styles. A factor analysis revealed six underlying dimensions of musical taste. A hierarchical cluster analysis then grouped all participants, regardless of their status, according to their similarity on these dimensions. The employed exploratory approach was expected to reveal potential differences between musicology students and controls. A three-cluster solution was obtained. Comparisons of the clusters in terms of musical taste revealed differences in the listening frequency and variety of appreciated music styles: the first cluster (51% musicology students/27% controls) showed the greatest musical engagement across all dimensions although with a tendency toward ≫sophisticated≪ musical styles. The second cluster (36% musicology students/46% controls) exhibited an interest in ≫conventional≪ music, while the third cluster (13% musicology students/27% controls) showed a strong liking of rock music. The results provide some support for the notion of specific tendencies in the musical taste of musicology students and the contribution of familiarity and knowledge toward musical omnivorousness. Further differences between the clusters in terms of social, personality, and sociodemographic factors are discussed.
Psychology of Music | 2018
Paul Elvers; Timo Fischinger; Jochen Steffens
In everyday life people use music to adjust their levels of arousal, to regulate their mood and emotions, and to cope with previous experiences, indicating that music plays an important role for everyday wellbeing. While the relationship between music and emotions has received considerable interest in past decades, little is known about the self-esteem boosting function of empowering music. In the present study, we investigated the relationship of music listening and self-esteem, by examining how momentary explicit and implicit self-esteem are (a) influenced by the expressive properties of music and (b) predicted by individual differences in responses to music. Results indicate that both explicit and implicit self-esteem are affected by music listening but in different ways. While momentary explicit self-esteem changed as a function of the expressive properties of the music and was positively predicted by liking, implicit self-esteem was positively predicted by empathy and negatively predicted by nostalgia. In contrast to changes in self-esteem, no changes in mood were observed. We anticipate our findings to be a starting point for further investigations of the cognitive and affective processes involved when listening to empowering music.
Empirical Studies of The Arts | 2017
Fabian Greb; Paul Elvers; Timo Fischinger
This article evaluates trends in empirical aesthetics by systematically reviewing the contents of the journal Empirical Studies of the Arts from its first issue in 1983 up to 2014. To sufficiently capture the wide distribution of art divisions, diverse approaches, and variety of methods involved in empirical aesthetics, 398 articles were examined in the following three categories: Art Domains, Topics, and Methods. In a second step, all 38 music-related articles were reviewed in terms of study design, participants, stimuli, analysis methods, results, and their relation to the field of empirical aesthetics. Based on this, distributions and longitudinal developments within the journal were identified and assessments regarding their relation to empirical aesthetics with special emphasis on music were made.
Music Perception | 2017
Hans Neuhoff; Rainer Polak; Timo Fischinger
Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal | 2018
Rainer Polak; Nori Jacoby; Timo Fischinger; Daniel Goldberg; Andre Holzapfel; Justin London
Empirical Musicology Review | 2018
Timo Fischinger; Annette van Dyck-Hemming
Archive | 2016
Timo Fischinger; Gunter Kreutz; Pauline Larrouy-Maestri
Timing & Time Perception | 2015
Mark T. Elliott; Timo Fischinger
Psychomusicology: Music, Mind and Brain | 2015
Timo Fischinger; Klaus Frieler; Jukka Louhivuori
Archive | 2015
Timo Fischinger