Faculty of Music, University of Oxford, St. Aldate's, Oxford OX1 1DB, UK.
Sociology, Philosophy & Anthropology (SPA), Exeter University, EX4 4RJ, UK.
Phys Life Rev. 2015 Dec;15:61-88. doi: 10.1016/j.plrev.2015.09.001. Epub 2015 Sep 7.
In the age of the Internet and with the dramatic proliferation of mobile listening technologies, music has unprecedented global distribution and embeddedness in people's lives. It is a source of intense experiences of both the most intimate and solitary, and public and collective, kinds - from an individual with their smartphone and headphones, to large-scale live events and global simulcasts; and it increasingly brings together a huge range of cultures and histories, through developments in world music, sampling, the re-issue of historical recordings, and the explosion of informal and home music-making that circulates via YouTube. For many people, involvement with music can be among the most powerful and potentially transforming experiences in their lives. At the same time, there has been increasing interest in music's communicative and affective capacities, and its potential to act as an agent of social bonding and affiliation. This review critically discusses a considerable body of research and scholarship, across disciplines ranging from the neuroscience and psychology of music to cultural musicology and the sociology and anthropology of music, that provides evidence for music's capacity to promote empathy and social/cultural understanding through powerful affective, cognitive and social factors; and explores ways in which to connect and make sense of this disparate evidence (and counter-evidence). It reports the outcome of an empirical study that tests one aspect of those claims, demonstrating that 'passive' listening to the music of an unfamiliar culture can significantly change the cultural attitudes of listeners with high dispositional empathy; presents a model that brings together the primary components of the music and empathy research into a single framework; and considers both some of the applications, and some of the shortcomings and problems, of understanding music from the perspective of empathy.
在互联网时代,随着移动聆听技术的飞速发展,音乐具有前所未有的全球传播力和融入人们生活的能力。它是人们体验最私密和最孤独、最公共和最集体的情感的源泉——从一个带着智能手机和耳机的个体,到大型现场活动和全球同步播放;它通过世界音乐、采样、历史录音的再发行以及通过 YouTube 传播的非正式和家庭音乐制作的爆炸式增长,越来越多地将各种文化和历史联系在一起。对许多人来说,参与音乐活动可能是他们生活中最强大、最具变革性的体验之一。与此同时,人们对音乐的交流和情感能力以及它作为社会联系和认同的媒介的潜力越来越感兴趣。本综述批判性地讨论了大量的研究和学术成果,这些成果涵盖了从音乐神经科学和心理学到文化音乐学以及音乐社会学和人类学等学科,为音乐通过强大的情感、认知和社会因素促进同理心和社会/文化理解的能力提供了证据;并探讨了如何将这些不同的证据(和反证据)联系起来并理解它们。它报告了一项实证研究的结果,该研究测试了这些主张的一个方面,证明“被动”聆听陌生文化的音乐可以显著改变具有高同理心倾向的听众的文化态度;提出了一个将音乐和同理心研究的主要组成部分整合到一个单一框架中的模型;并考虑了从同理心的角度理解音乐的一些应用,以及一些缺点和问题。