Omigie Diana
Music Department, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, 60322, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
J Comp Neurol. 2016 Jun 1;524(8):1676-86. doi: 10.1002/cne.23854. Epub 2015 Jul 30.
The number of studies investigating music processing in the human brain continues to increase, with a large proportion of them focussing on the correlates of so-called musical emotions. The current Review highlights the recent development whereby such studies are no longer concerned only with basic emotions such as happiness and sadness but also with so-called music-specific or "aesthetic" ones such as nostalgia and wonder. It also highlights how mechanisms such as expectancy and empathy, which are seen as inducing musical emotions, are enjoying ever-increasing investigation and substantiation with physiological and neuroimaging methods. It is proposed that a combination of these approaches, namely, investigation of the precise mechanisms through which so-called music-specific or aesthetic emotions may arise, will provide the most important advances for our understanding of the unique nature of musical experience.
研究人类大脑中音乐处理过程的研究数量持续增加,其中很大一部分聚焦于所谓音乐情感的相关因素。当前的综述强调了最近的发展趋势,即此类研究不再仅仅关注诸如快乐和悲伤等基本情绪,还关注诸如怀旧和惊奇等所谓特定于音乐的或“审美”的情绪。它还强调了诸如期待和共情等被视为引发音乐情感的机制,正通过生理学和神经成像方法得到越来越多的研究和证实。有人提出,将这些方法结合起来,即研究所谓特定于音乐的或审美情绪可能产生的精确机制,将为我们理解音乐体验的独特本质带来最重要的进展。