Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Abstract Abstract Two selections of music, judged by raters to differentially affect their self-reported happiness, exhilaration, despondency, and sadness, were used as a mood induction procedure to investigate the effects of "happy" and "sad" music on behaviour and self-reported mood, and to assess the contribution of explicit demand characteristics to the procedure. The design was similar to those used by Velten (1968) and Polivy and Doyle (1980). Thirty-five subjects listened to "happy", "sad", or no music. Explicit instructions to subjects regarding the music were varied across groups. All subjects then completed two self-report measures and four behavioural tasks. It was found that the music mood induction procedure differentially affected self-reported mood and some measures of behavioural change, and explicit demand characteristics were found not to have contributed substantially to the mood effects found.
Pamela Kenealy (Tue,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: