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    Collective Music Listening and Emotional Contagion: Emotional Contagion and College Students at a Music Festival

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    Name:
    5292_Johnathan_Ramirez.pdf
    Embargo:
    2027-12-16
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    Author
    Ramirez, Johnathan
    Keyword
    First Reader Meagan E. Curtis
    Senior Project
    Semester Fall 2022
    Readers/Advisors
    Curtis, Meagan E.
    Term and Year
    Fall 2022
    Date Published
    2022
    
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    Show full item record
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12648/12843
    Abstract
    The ways people listen to music varies and has changed considerably throughout history and advances in technology. Live performances and concerts have remained constant as form of music listening, though events like the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdowns have kept listeners away from large live listening experiences. The live music setting allows for a unique experience that listeners seek out, a large factor that contributes to this is being an audience member and a part of a bigger crowd. The current study investigated the effects of emotional within listening experiences, in this specific instance SUNY Purchase's Culture Shock music festival. This study explored the relationship between emotional contagion and several factors: musical enjoyment and appreciation, physical engagement with the music, social connectedness, and related facets of the concert-going experience. Said effects were examined through post-concert surveys completed by festival attendants where they answered questions relating to their concert experience. The participants answered the questions on a scale of 1 (strongly disagree) to 5 (strongly agree). The data was exported from Qualtrics, coded and sorted in Microsoft Excel, and then analyzed using JASP. The factors observed were constructed by summing each participant's numerical responses to questions within each factor category. The various factor categories were analyzed using a series of stepwise regressions. Emotional response/connectedness was shown in the results to be the largest contributing factor to how participants experienced the concert, revealing that emotional contagion does have a significant effect on how concertgoers experience a live music event.
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    Purchase College - State University of New York (PC) is committed to ensuring that people with disabilities have an opportunity equal to that of their nondisabled peers to participate in the College's programs, benefits, and services, including those delivered through electronic and information technology. If you encounter an access barrier with a specific item and have a remediation request, please contact lib.ir@purchase.edu.
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