Abstract
Music style is tightly connected with listeners’ emotional processes and neural activities. However, it remains unclear how the brain works when different music styles are processed emotionally. The current study analyzed the neural activation associated with five music styles during emotion-evoking. Twenty non-musicians participated in the functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanning and the emotional ratings of pleasure and arousal evoked by pop, rock, jazz, folk, and classical music. Results showed that classical music was associated with the highest pleasure rating and deactivation of the corpus callosum. Rock music was associated with the highest arousal rating and deactivation of the cingulate gyrus. Pop music activated the bilateral supplementary motor areas (SMA) and the superior temporal gyrus (STG) with moderate pleasure and arousal. As the first fMRI experiment investigating the relationship between the music style and emotion, it provides neural correlates of different music styles during emotion-evoking.
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