Emotional experience of music by psychiatric patients compared with normal subjects
- 1 June 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica
- Vol. 65 (6) , 450-460
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0447.1982.tb00868.x
Abstract
Psychiatric patients (107) and normal subjects (100) were exposed to 7 newly composed pieces of music orchestrated for a small symphony orchestra. The patients were divided into 7 subgroups: schizophrenic, depressive and manic psychosis; obsessive, depressive, anxiety and hysterical neurosis. All subjects rated the music on semantic differential scales describing 3 factors of emotional experience: tension-relaxation, gaiety-gloom and attraction-repulsion. The ratings by patients in the different groups were compared with those by the normal subjects. Expressiveness in music was communicated to patients in the same relative way as to normals. In the various diagnostic groups, several marked differences in experience were demonstrated. The main findings were that schizophrenic psychotics experienced the music as more attractive, while depressive and anxiety neurotics experienced it as less attractive, than normals. Depressive and manic psychotics experienced the music as less gay. Obsessive neurotics seem to be more sensitive to tension in music than normals.Keywords
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