Publications
2014

Daly, Ian; Malik, Asad; Hwang, Faustina; Roesch, Etienne; Weaver, James; Kirke, Alexis; Williams, Duncan; Miranda, Eduardo; Nasuto, Slawomir J.
Neural correlates of emotional responses to music: an EEG study Journal Article
In: Neuroscience letters, vol. 573, pp. 52–57, 2014.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Asymmetry, EEG, Emotion, Functional connectivity, Music
@article{Daly2014NC,
title = {Neural correlates of emotional responses to music: an EEG study},
author = {Ian Daly and Asad Malik and Faustina Hwang and Etienne Roesch and James Weaver and Alexis Kirke and Duncan Williams and Eduardo Miranda and Slawomir J. Nasuto},
url = {http://www.iandaly.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Neural-correlates-of-emotional-responses-to-music-an-EEG-study-pub.pdf},
doi = {10.1016/j.neulet.2014.05.003},
year = {2014},
date = {2014-06-24},
journal = {Neuroscience letters},
volume = {573},
pages = {52–57},
abstract = {This paper presents an EEG study into the neural correlates of music-induced emotions. We presented participants with a large dataset containing musical pieces in different styles, and asked them to report on their induced emotional responses.
We found neural correlates of music-induced emotion in a number of frequencies over the pre-frontal cortex. Additionally, we found a set of patterns of functional connectivity, defined by inter-channel coherence measures, to be significantly different between groups of music-induced emotional responses.},
keywords = {Asymmetry, EEG, Emotion, Functional connectivity, Music},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
This paper presents an EEG study into the neural correlates of music-induced emotions. We presented participants with a large dataset containing musical pieces in different styles, and asked them to report on their induced emotional responses.
We found neural correlates of music-induced emotion in a number of frequencies over the pre-frontal cortex. Additionally, we found a set of patterns of functional connectivity, defined by inter-channel coherence measures, to be significantly different between groups of music-induced emotional responses.
We found neural correlates of music-induced emotion in a number of frequencies over the pre-frontal cortex. Additionally, we found a set of patterns of functional connectivity, defined by inter-channel coherence measures, to be significantly different between groups of music-induced emotional responses.