Abstract

The effect of background music (BGM) on cognitive task performance is a popular topic. However, the evidence is not converging: experimental studies show mixed results depending on the task, the type of music used and individual characteristics. Here, we explored how people use BGM while optimally performing various cognitive tasks in everyday life, such as reading, writing, memorizing, and critical thinking. Specifically, the frequency of BGM usage, preferred music types, beliefs about the scientific evidence on BGM, and individual characteristics, such as age, extraversion and musical background were investigated. Although the results confirmed highly diverse strategies among individuals regarding when, how often, why and what type of BGM is used, we found several general tendencies: people tend to use less BGM when engaged in more difficult tasks, they become less critical about the type of BGM when engaged in easier tasks, and there is a negative correlation between the frequency of BGM and age, indicating that younger generations tend to use more BGM than older adults. The current and previous evidence are discussed in light of existing theories. Altogether, this study identifies essential variables to consider in future research and further forwards a theory-driven perspective in the field.

Highlights

  • Music is omnipresent in the current society

  • We explored how people use background music (BGM) while being engaged in daily cognitive tasks

  • The results confirmed highly diverse strate­ gies among individuals regarding the use of BGM

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Summary

Introduction

Music is omnipresent in the current society. In 2018, an average Dutch person spent 152 min every day listening to music (The Statistical Portal, 2019) and the number of active users of music streaming services has significantly increased. Research is not conclusive about the effect of background music (BGM) on the performance of daily cognitive tasks: there appears a vast variability depending on the task, the type of music, and the characteristics of the listener, as well as complex interactions between those factors. Borella et al, 2019; Gonzalez & Aiello, 2019; Lemaire, 2019; Li et al., 2012) Motivated by this discrepancy and with the increasing relevance of the issue, our study takes an approach complementary to controlled experimental investigations and explores how people use BGM during daily cognitive tasks, those involved in studying, by means of a survey. The current study ex­ plores the usage of BGM on reading comprehension, memory, reasoning, writing, as well as general attention, while considering individual differences in extraversion, music proficiency and age

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