Research Links Musical Taste with Cognitive Style

Researchers at the University of Cambridge have linked musical taste to cognitive style, or the way you think.

In a recently published study, a team of psychologists led by PhD student David Greenberg looked at how cognitive style influences musical choices by determining the degree to which a person is empathetic (in touch with the feelings of others) or “systemizing”(analytical).

“Although people’s music choices fluctuates over time, we’ve discovered a person’s empathy levels and thinking style predicts what kind of music they like,” Greenberg said, noting that cognitive style can be a better predictor of what music a person likes than personality traits.

The researchers conducted multiple studies with more than 4,000 participants, recruited mainly through the myPersonality Facebook app, and found that people who scored high on empathy tended to prefer mellow music (R&B, soft rock, and adult contemporary genres), unpretentious music (country, folk, and singer/songwriter genres) and contemporary music (electronica, Latin, acid jazz, and Euro pop). “Empathizers” disliked intense music, such as punk and heavy metal.

Probing deeper, empathizers preferred music with low energy (gentle, reflective, sensual, and warm elements), negative emotions (sad and depressing characteristics), or emotional depth (poetic, relaxing, and thoughtful features).

In contrast, “systemizers” favored intense music but disliked mellow and unpretentious musical styles. They preferred music with high energy (strong, tense, and thrilling elements), positive emotions (animated and fun features), or a high degree of cerebral depth and complexity.

Results were consistent even within specified genres: Empathizers preferred mellow, unpretentious jazz, while systemizers preferred more complex, avant-garde jazz.

“A lot of money is put into algorithms to choose what music you may want to listen to, for example on Spotify and Apple Music,” concluded Greenberg, a trained jazz saxophonist. “By knowing an individual’s thinking style, such services might in future be able to fine tune their music recommendations to an individual.”

So are you an empathizer or systemizer?

More information on the study is available here.

COMMENTS
germay0653's picture

Not sure I agree with the overall conclusion of placing people in one category or another. I think each of us have different emotional states over the course of time and depending on the current emotional state/mood I may gravitate towards being analytical and there are other times when I'm very empathetic and my musical choices follow suit.

hk2000's picture

I agree with the above comment- It's not that simple. Studies should never be taken as more than a snapshot would be to judge a person's look. Like a snapshot, studies of this kind, which seem to be the preferred scientific methodology these days, do not take into account a myriad of variables that change very unpredictably and affect a persons likes and dislikes- music or otherwise.

Ovation123's picture

I like Bread and Kurt Rosenwinkel, along with Rush and Loreena Mckennitt. What does that make me?

canman4pm's picture

And how many "singer/songwriter" types are unpretentious?

Bluejimbop's picture

White.

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