What your favorite music says about you!

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(From the latest issue of Psychology Today)

What's Your Soundtrack?

Just as a glimpse inside a bedroom or office provides clues about someone's character, so too can a peek at his music collection.

The question "What kind of music do you like?" is so revealing, it is the number one topic of conversation among young adults who are getting to know each other, according to psychologists Jason Rentfrow of the University of Cambridge in the U.K., and Sam Gosling at the University of Texas at Austin. Knowing whether a person prefers John Coltrane to Mariah Carey, or Puccini to Prince allows for remarkably accurate personality predictions, their research has found.

What do your tunes day about you? PT faces the music.

GET INTO THE GROOVE
Strangers can accurately assess another person's level of creativity, open-mindedness and extroversion after listening to his or her top 10 favorites songs. Rentfrow thinks that personality clues are conveyed in the music's tempo, rhythm and lyrics.

SMART SOUNDS
Fans of jazz, classical and other "complex" music typically have above-average IQ scores.

EASY LISTENERS
Fans of country and Top 40 hits tend to be more conventional, honest and conservative compared with fans of other genres. "People who like country and pop might be more simpleminded, and that's not necessarily bad," Rentfrow. "They just avoid making things unnecessarily complex."

DRAMA QUEENS
Compared with other music fans, opera aficionados are three times more likely to endorse suicide as a solution to family dishonor, says Steven Stack, a psychologist at Wayne State University in Michigan. Don't blame Madame Butterfly. Stack says dramatic personalities are drawn to opera, not influenced by it.

PARENTAL ADVISORY
Parents often worry that music-whether it's Elvis or Eminem-promotes sexual or aggressive behavior in teens. Rentfrow's work has found no direct link. In fact, fans of gangsta rap or heavy metal are often more timid and shy than other kids, he says.

BOOM TOWN
Extroverts gravitate to music with a heavy bass line, according to a Northeast Louisiana University study.

BRAIN INVASION
Whether you can study or work efficiently while listening to music may depend on how outgoing you are. Background music can help extroverts focus, but tends to torment introverts.

PEAK PERFORMANCE
It may work for Rocky Balboa, but music doesn't always pump up athletes. Motivational music can give weightlifters an edge. Runners, however, don't move farther or faster with the help of motivational music.

MOTORMOUTHS
Fans of energetic music like dance and soul are more likely to impulsively blurt out their thoughts,compared with fans of other styles.

musically (musically), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 19:37 (twenty years ago)

Fans of energetic music like dance and soul are more likely to impulsively blurt out their thoughts,compared with fans of other styles.

Metal Mike to thread for confirmation!

Huk-L (Huk-L), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 19:43 (twenty years ago)

Fans of noise music are generally antisocial malcontents that need medication.

js (honestengine), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:15 (twenty years ago)

nahhh, we just want medication and it ain't our fault your society cant dig the future.

bb (bbrz), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:40 (twenty years ago)

let's send PT over to the wfmu list. then we'll don our garbage bags and sit back and watch they heads essplode, galagher wit watermelon style.

andrew m. (andrewmorgan), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:45 (twenty years ago)

ha

bb (bbrz), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:54 (twenty years ago)

I disagree with most of that article. the most glaring stuff relates to introverts and extroverts, and the whole conservative thing. does that mean artistically conservative, politically, socially? like, if you polled the green party, are you telling me they'd all be listening to Black Dice? (and if it just means artistically, did we really need a study telling us that people who tend to listen to conventional music have conventional music tastes?)

Dominique (dleone), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 20:59 (twenty years ago)

yeah..this thing is basically going nowhere fast..and since i have no idea how they made these surveys, the type of sample and size they used, and how they defined a variety of concepts...i can't imagine giving the thing any credence. i have no faith in polls in general, but when these sort of surveys are used to point to grand social trends i'm beyond skeptical.

are boredoms motivational (to anyone but me)?

bb (bbrz), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:06 (twenty years ago)

hi.

GET EQUIPPED WITH BUBBLE LEAD (ex machina), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:12 (twenty years ago)

yeah, we know about you

bb (bbrz), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:29 (twenty years ago)

They didn't poll people...it's based on studies the two researchers did.

musically (musically), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:31 (twenty years ago)

What do your tunes day about you?

this explains alot.

otay\\o//winner (tremendoid), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:31 (twenty years ago)

yes, and they in no way explain those studies.

bb (bbrz), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:32 (twenty years ago)

I think you're expecting a lot from what was just a blurb about the study in a magazine. If you're interested, the study origially appeared in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, where I'm sure they explained their methodology in depth.

musically (musically), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:43 (twenty years ago)

i guess my problem is that little blurbs like that emphasize the generalities and whitewash the possible effects of methodology to the point of propaganda

bb (bbrz), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:46 (twenty years ago)

PARENTAL ADVISORY and BOOM TOWN are contradictory, no?

The MOTORMOUTHS thing is interesting to me tho! Although maybe this whole article should be title SPECIOUS SCIENCE.

deej.. (deej..), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:54 (twenty years ago)

Until every magazine turns into a collection of phone book-thick graduate theses that's just a cross you'll have to bear. In case you missed the implied disclaimer, FOR ENTERTAINMENT ONLY. Lots of this is silly but I thought it was interesting.

musically (musically), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 21:56 (twenty years ago)

too ding-dong headed for ILM, i guess :(

Susan Douglas (Susan Douglas), Wednesday, 4 January 2006 22:08 (twenty years ago)

SMART SOUNDS
Fans of jazz, classical and other "complex" music typically have above-average IQ scores.

The jazz fans I know are mostly dumbshit potheads.

Curt1s St3ph3ns, Thursday, 5 January 2006 00:51 (twenty years ago)

HEY DERE!

jaxon (jaxon), Thursday, 5 January 2006 01:42 (twenty years ago)

eight months pass...
JAZZ MAKES FOR SMARTINGS

Hoosteen (Hoosteen), Tuesday, 5 September 2006 01:29 (nineteen years ago)

Saint Simon is considered the first socialist and the first person to coin the term "avant garde." Thus, he probably wouldn't have spent two seconds on any of this America Idol crap, right?

Cunga (Cunga), Tuesday, 5 September 2006 05:02 (nineteen years ago)

MOTORMOUTHS
Fans of energetic music like dance and soul are more likely to impulsively blurt out their thoughts,compared with fans of other styles.

That's cos they're all on the whizz, innit?

wogan lenin (dog latin), Tuesday, 5 September 2006 08:37 (nineteen years ago)


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