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Conscientiousness and Extraversion relate to responsiveness to tempo in dance
Affiliation:1. Department of Computer Science, University of Texas at Dallas, 800 West Campbell Road Richardson, TX 75080, USA;2. Department of Applied Mathematics II, University of Seville, Camino de los Descubrimientos s/n, Seville 41092, Spain;1. Department of Psychology, City University London, School of Arts and Social Science, St John Street, London EC1V 0HB, United Kingdom;2. Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom;3. Human Evolution and Cognition (IFISC-CSIC) and Department of Psychology, University of the Balearic Islands, Spain
Abstract:Previous research has shown broad relationships between personality and dance, but the relationship between personality and specific structural features of music has not been explored. The current study explores the influence of personality and trait empathy on dancers’ responsiveness to small tempo differences between otherwise musically identical stimuli, measured by difference in the amount in acceleration of key joints. Thirty participants were recorded using motion capture while dancing to excerpts from six popular songs that were time-stretched to be slightly faster or slower than their original tempi. Analysis revealed that higher conscientiousness and lower extraversion both correlated with greater responsiveness to tempo change. Partial correlation analysis revealed that conscientiousness remained significantly correlated with responsiveness when extraversion was controlled, but not vice versa. No effect of empathy was found. Implications are discussed.
Keywords:Dance  Music  Motion capture  Personality  Acceleration  Tempo responsiveness
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