Baier Janina, Wöllner Clemens, Wolf Anna
Institute for Systematic Musicology, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2021 Dec 10;12:784255. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.784255. eCollection 2021.
Prosocial effects of music have recently attracted increased attention in research and media. An often-cited experiment, carried out by Kirschner and Tomasello in 2010 under laboratory conditions, found that children at the age of four years were more willing to help each other after they had engaged in synchronous musical activities. The aim of the current study was to replicate this research under controlled field conditions in the children's social environment, and to disentangle the musical synchronization effect by introducing a verbal interaction (singing together) and a motor interaction (tapping together) task, contrasted by an asynchronous control condition. In a between-participants design, no effects of musical synchronization nor the children's gender were found. Furthermore, age was not related to prosocial behavior. Explanations are systematically discussed, yet it remains possible that the original effect found in 2010 might be overestimated and less consistently reproducible as previously assumed.
音乐的亲社会效应最近在研究和媒体中受到了越来越多的关注。2010年,基尔希纳和托马塞洛在实验室条件下进行了一项经常被引用的实验,发现四岁的儿童在参与同步音乐活动后更愿意互相帮助。本研究的目的是在儿童的社会环境中,在可控的实地条件下重复这项研究,并通过引入言语互动(一起唱歌)和运动互动(一起敲击)任务来厘清音乐同步效应,与异步控制条件形成对比。在一项被试间设计中,未发现音乐同步效应和儿童性别的影响。此外,年龄与亲社会行为无关。我们系统地讨论了解释,但2010年发现的原始效应仍有可能被高估,并且不像之前假设的那样具有一致的可重复性。