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Re: Music listening styles
Dear Guy and list,
In an experiment with 60 students that walked a street circuit of 2 km through various environments once with a walkman and once without, only 1 person showed that she synchronised spontaneously her steps to the music. I was really amazed by this low number as we had taken care that the tempo of the music was very close to the normal walking tempo, often only 1 or 2 percent difference and that the beat was clearly perceptible. You know that, when we instruct people to walk to the beat of the music they like that and find it stimulating and many people use it for jogging. But if we do not ask there attention for the music, they either don't feel the pulse of the music or they don't feel the movement of their body.
Leon
On 27 Sep 2010, at 11:15, Guy Madison wrote:
> Dear Laszlo and the list,
>
> I think this is a very important question, and it is also one that I have been pondering for years. It is my impression too that people tend to come in two distinct "listener styles": focused listening and background listening. Of course, many people can do both and switch between them and so forth. Nevertheless, there is one situation that seems to be "selective" - that which Laszlo describes when one listens ONLY, perhaps through headphones and with eyes closed - some people seem unable to do it! On type of explanation could be that these people are too "un-fascinated" by music itself to find it worth while to devote so much attention to it. Another type of explanation could be that they require more "things to happen", such that they become understimulated with only auditory stimuli, or - as Laszlo suggested - they simply have no need to listen focused because they *can handle* multiple stimuli simultaneously.
>
> Add to that another variety in which people gather to listen in this way, in concentration and without speaking, and then talk about one's experiences of the music after it has played to its end. That talking might arouse some association, which prompts the choice of another piece of music, which one then listens to in the same fashion, and so forth. I know that this happens in gatherings of men, but I have never heard that it has happened in gatherings of women or in mixed groups.
>
> Therefore this seems an excellent opportunity to ask about such experiences among readers of this list.
>
> Guy
>
>
> Are there any studies on music listening habits of people? For me, "background listening" does not exist. I either concentrate on the music or on what I'm doing. That is, in a store I simply ingore the music - or find it annoying at most. But for my girlfriend, listening to music is always parallel with some activity such as cooking. She said she couldn't do what I'm doing: sitting in a chair with headphones on and eyes closed.
> Is it a gender difference (i.e. women can concentrate on more things at the same time), or is there any other general thing that can be said in this respect?