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Does music impact our emotions? : - Coggle Diagram
Does music impact our emotions? :
music
what is music
vocal or instrumental sounds (or both) combined in such a way as to produce beauty of form, harmony, and expression of emotion.
classical music
Art music, or classical music, is different from popular and folk music. Classical music is more complex. It is usually written down in a form that classical musicians can read off the page. Classical musicians do not frequently improvise.
rock music
Rock is a broad genre of popular music that originated as "rock and roll" in the United States in the late 1940s and early 1950s, developing into a range of different styles from the mid-1960s, particularly in the U.S. and the United Kingdom
emotions
what are emotions
emotions are mental states brought on by neurophysical changes, associated with thoughts, feelings, behavioural responses, pleasure and diospleasure
6 basic emotions
anger
the feeling of annoyance, displeasure or anatagonism
disgust
the feeling of revulsion or disapproval as a result of something displeasant or offensive
happiness
a positive state of mind triggered by events, thoughts or life experiences
fear
an unpleasant emotion triggered by the threat of danger, pain or harm
sadness
the feeling of being down or unhappy as a result of grief, discouragement, dissapointment or pain
surprise
a sense of astonishment or wonder a result of an unexpected or uncalled for event.
design types
observational
where researchers observe the effect of a risk factor, diagnostic test, treatment or other intervention without trying to change who is or isn't exposed to it
experimental
planning a set of procedures to investigate a relationship between variables
qualitattive
a set of questions asking people like a survey, but the data collected are not number or value answers
quantivative
quantitative data is recieved in the form of a survey but with data answers being only in numbers
variables
independant
The independant variable is the variable that you manipulate in ordeer to investigate the effects in the experiment eg the type of music being listened to
dependant
the dependant variable is the varliable that changes as a result of the independant variable manipulation eg, the heart rate taken after listening to music
extrenous
An extrenous variable is a variable that isnt being investigated in the experiment that has the power to affect the outcome. eg, the environment
sample sizes
population
Your population when surverying for your experiment is everyone that you want results from. The population is the group of people chosen. This could be: All teenage girls in australia, all men in the UK, all people with green eyes wtc.
socio-economic
When choosing the people involved in an investigation, choosing a fair sample is important as the experiment may not be revelant to people. For example if doing an experiment or survey on homelessness, asking people in an area not affected by homelessness is not going to give you the most informative results.
potential problems
when choosing a randomized sample or the people in a population, there is always the chance that the sample is going to be all the same type of people, or people with the same opinion or answer. This affects the results because there is a whole pther group of people with different answers that havent been acounted for.
ethics
what are ethics
moral principles that govern someones behaviour
informed consent
human participants can enter research freely (voluntarily) with full information about what it means for them to take part, and that they give consent before they enter the research.
right to withdraw
The right to withdraw is a concept in clinical research ethics that a study participant in a clinical trial has a right to end participation in that trial at will.
debrief
a procedure that occurs at the conclusion of the human subject's participation in the study
voluntary participation
Voluntary participation means the people answering questions have made a free choice to be involved in the gathering of information, without being coerced into being involved in any way.
confidential
Confidentiality refers to the duty to protect privileged information and to share entrusted information responsibly. It stems from the notion that a person's wishes, decisions, and personal information should be treated with respect. The duty of confidentiality can apply to individuals, organizations, and institutions.
accurate reporting
Accurate reporting refers to the subject truthfully reporting results recieved from the investigation and not fabricating any information.
deception
the internal misleading of subjects or the withholidng of full information about the nature of the experiment. Eg, telling a subject the results are being used for something theyre not.
data types
categorical
Categorical data is divded into categories
nominal
Data values that have no logical ranking
ordinal
values that arent numbers and can be logically ranked
numerical
Data in number form
continuous
Continous data is data that can be in any number form, usually a result of measuring
discrete
data values that are exact number values usually a result of counting