Abstract

Judgments of music performance quality are commonly employed in music practice, education, and research. However, previous studies have demonstrated the limited reliability of such judgments, and there is now evidence that extraneous visual, social, and other “non-musical” features can unduly influence them. The present study employed continuous measurement techniques to examine how the process of forming a music quality judgment is affected by the manipulation of temporally specific visual cues. Video footage comprising an appropriate stage entrance and error-free performance served as the standard condition (Video 1). This footage was manipulated to provide four additional conditions, each identical save for a single variation: an inappropriate stage entrance (Video 2); the presence of an aural performance error midway through the piece (Video 3); the same error accompanied by a negative facial reaction by the performer (Video 4); the facial reaction with no corresponding aural error (Video 5). The participants were 53 musicians and 52 non-musicians (N = 105) who individually assessed the performance quality of one of the five randomly assigned videos via a digital continuous measurement interface and headphones. The results showed that participants viewing the “inappropriate” stage entrance made judgments significantly more quickly than those viewing the “appropriate” entrance, and while the poor entrance caused significantly lower initial scores among those with musical training, the effect did not persist long into the performance. The aural error caused an immediate drop in quality judgments that persisted to a lower final score only when accompanied by the frustrated facial expression from the pianist; the performance error alone caused a temporary drop only in the musicians' ratings, and the negative facial reaction alone caused no reaction regardless of participants' musical experience. These findings demonstrate the importance of visual information in forming evaluative and aesthetic judgments in musical contexts and highlight how visual cues dynamically influence those judgments over time.

Highlights

  • The evaluation of performance quality is a fixture of musical practice

  • We examined the presence of facial reactions to a severe performance error

  • The present study sought to examine this temporal nature of musical assessment, employing continuous measures methodologies to reveal previously unexamined immediate and overall effects on the decisionmaking process of extra-musical variables that could be defined by their having occurred prior to or at a specific point during a performance

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The evaluation of performance quality is a fixture of musical practice. In educational and professional contexts, quality judgments are used to assess a performer’s ability, to diagnose performance problems, to provide summaries of achievement, to determine competition rankings, and to award positions of employment (Goolsby, 1999). Quality evaluations have been shown to be affected by otherwise unrelated visual features including race (e.g., Elliott, 1995; Davidson and Edgar, 2003; VanWeelden, 2004), dress (Griffiths, 2008, 2010, 2011), attractiveness (Wapnick et al, 1997, 1998, 2000; Ryan and CostaGiomi, 2004; Ryan et al, 2006), and sex (Davidson and Edgar, 2003), while the introduction of the blind orchestral audition since the 1970s has been linked to a rebalancing of such biases, including a marked increase in the hiring of female performers (Goldin and Rouse, 2000) These studies are supported by a meta-analysis that has demonstrated a global effect (d = 0.51 SDs) of visual information on performance quality, expressiveness, and appreciation ratings (Platz and Kopiez, 2012). In order to maximize ecological validity, full performances were used that, despite experimental manipulations, gave the impression of live, undoctored performances

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