Age trends in musical preferences in adulthood: 2. Sources of social influences as determinants of preferences

Using the Music Preferences in Adulthood Model (MPAM, Bonneville-Roussy et al., 2017), an integrative model of the psychological determinants of musical preferences in adulthood, the main objective of this article is to investigate how different sources of social influences may affect age trends in musical preferences in adulthood. More specifically, we examine how the social network (such as family and peers), and psychological interpersonal dispositions (such as one’s psychological tendencies towards conformity) may influence these age trends. In two studies with a total sample size of over 950 adults, we examine how social influence variables are associated with age trends in musical preferences, measured with music genres and music clips (samples of musical audio recordings). Results revealed that the social network and interpersonal dispositions are related to preferences for different musical dimensions. These relationships were stronger for the musical genres dimensions as compared with the musical clips dimensions. In addition, our findings showed that dispositions toward conformity moderate the relations between age and musical preferences in adulthood. Those results confirm that social influences, especially the interpersonal disposition towards conformity, are important in the adoption of different musical preferences as adults evolve in age. The results are discussed within a lifespan developmental psychology of music perspective.

[1]  John A. Sloboda,et al.  The role of parental influences in the development of musical performance , 1996 .

[2]  Ronald Fischer,et al.  How Shared Preferences in Music Create Bonds Between People , 2011, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[3]  John A. Johnson,et al.  The international personality item pool and the future of public-domain personality measures ☆ , 2006 .

[4]  M. Delsing,et al.  Intergenerational Continuity of Taste: Parental and Adolescent Music Preferences , 2011 .

[5]  D. Hargreaves The Developmental Psychology of Music by David J. Hargreaves , 1986 .

[6]  E. Altenmüller,et al.  The Influence of Social Normative and Informational Feedback on Musically Induced Emotions in an Online Music Listening Setting , 2013 .

[7]  Paul Rozin,et al.  Mutual exposure or close peer relationships do not seem to foster increased similarity in food, music or television program preferences , 2004, Appetite.

[8]  Man K. Xu,et al.  Music through the ages: Trends in musical engagement and preferences from adolescence through middle adulthood. , 2013, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[9]  S. Branje,et al.  The role of music preferences in early adolescents' friendship formation and stability. , 2009, Journal of adolescence.

[10]  S. Gosling,et al.  PERSONALITY PROCESSES AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES The Do Re Mi’s of Everyday Life: The Structure and Personality Correlates of Music Preferences , 2003 .

[11]  Alexandra Lamont,et al.  Music preference in adulthood: Why do we like the music we do? , 2006 .

[12]  Jill Harrison,et al.  Musical taste and ageing , 2010, Ageing and Society.

[13]  R. Cialdini,et al.  Social influence: Social norms, conformity and compliance. , 1998 .

[14]  B. Roberts,et al.  Evaluating Five Factor Theory and social investment perspectives on personality trait development , 2005 .

[15]  Gregory Fouts,et al.  Music Preferences, Personality Style, and Developmental Issues of Adolescents , 2003 .

[16]  J. Arnett,et al.  The Soundtrack of Recklessness , 1992 .

[17]  Gregory S. Berns,et al.  Neural mechanisms of the influence of popularity on adolescent ratings of music , 2010, NeuroImage.

[18]  R. Zweigenhaft A do re mi encore: A closer look at the personality correlates of music preferences. , 2008 .

[19]  William McCown,et al.  The role of personality and gender in preference for exaggerated bass in music. , 1997 .

[20]  M. E. Shaw,et al.  CONFORMITY AS A FUNCTION OF AGE LEVEL , 1966 .

[21]  Mark Shevy,et al.  Music genre as cognitive schema: extramusical associations with country and hip-hop music , 2008 .

[22]  M. Yaish,et al.  Class, status, and the intergenerational transmission of musical tastes in Israel , 2007 .

[23]  Laura L. Carstensen,et al.  Evidence for a Life-Span Theory of Socioemotional Selectivity , 1995 .

[24]  Ann Colley,et al.  Young People's Musical Taste: Relationship With Gender and Gender‐Related Traits1 , 2008 .

[25]  Rutger C. M. E. Engels,et al.  Adolescents' music preferences and personality characteristics , 2008 .

[26]  Diana Boer,et al.  Music listening in families and peer groups: benefits for young people's social cohesion and emotional well-being across four cultures , 2014, Front. Psychol..

[27]  Jacob Cohen Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences , 1969, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design.

[28]  Lingnan He,et al.  The pursuit of optimal distinctiveness and consumer preferences. , 2010, Scandinavian journal of psychology.

[29]  J. Arnett,et al.  Adolescents' uses of media for self-socialization , 1995 .

[30]  Thomas Schäfer,et al.  The Goals and Effects of Music Listening and Their Relationship to the Strength of Music Preference , 2016, PloS one.

[31]  Antje Bersch-Burauel Development of musical preferences in adulthood , 2006 .

[32]  D. Hargreaves,et al.  What is ‘open-earedness’, and how can it be measured? , 2018 .

[33]  Juul Mulder,et al.  Moved by music: A typology of music listeners , 2011 .

[34]  Kenneth H. Craik,et al.  The act frequency analysis of interpersonal dispositions: Aloofness, gregariousness, dominance and submissiveness1 , 1981 .

[35]  U. Nater,et al.  Sex differences in emotional and psychophysiological responses to musical stimuli. , 2006, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[36]  M. Tarrant,et al.  Can music bring people together? Effects of shared musical preference on intergroup bias in adolescence. , 2006, Scandinavian journal of psychology.

[37]  Michael Lynn,et al.  Individual Differences in the Pursuit of Self‐Uniqueness Through Consumption , 1997 .

[38]  P. Stern Birds of a feather sing together. , 2016, Science.

[39]  M. Pasupathi Age differences in response to conformity pressure for emotional and nonemotional material. , 1999, Psychology and aging.

[40]  Leif Finnas,et al.  How Can Musical Preferences Be Modified? A Research Review. , 1989 .

[41]  J. Hemming Is there a peak in popular music preference at a certain song-specific age? A replication of Holbrook & Schindler’s 1989 study , 2013 .

[42]  Chris Comber,et al.  Effects of Age, Gender, and Training on Musical Preferences of British Secondary School Students , 1995 .

[43]  Juul Mulder,et al.  From death metal to R&B? Consistency of music preferences among Dutch adolescents and young adults , 2010 .

[44]  Adrian C. North,et al.  Lifestyle correlates of musical preference: 1. Relationships, living arrangements, beliefs, and crime , 2007 .

[45]  Tally Katz‐Gerro,et al.  Cultural Consumption and Social Stratification: Leisure Activities, Musical Tastes, and Social Location , 1999 .

[46]  Adrian C. North,et al.  Lifestyle correlates of musical preference: 3. Travel, money, education, employment and health , 2007 .

[47]  Christian Tarnai,et al.  What Do Music Preferences Reveal About Personality? A Cross-Cultural Replication Using Self-Ratings and Ratings of Music Samples , 2012 .

[48]  The effect of looks and musical preference on trait inference , 2008 .

[49]  S. O’Neill The Social and Applied Psychology of Music , 2011 .

[50]  Michal Kosinski,et al.  The Song Remains the Same: A Replication and Extension of the MUSIC Model. , 2012, Music perception.

[51]  Shin-Kap Han,et al.  Unraveling the Brow: What and How of Choice in Musical Preference , 2003 .

[52]  Michal Kosinski,et al.  The Song Is You , 2016 .

[53]  Adrian C. North,et al.  Music and Adolescent Identity , 1999 .

[54]  Victor Minichiello,et al.  The meaning of music in the lives of older people: a qualitative study , 2005 .

[55]  Adrian C. North,et al.  English and American Adolescents' Reasons for Listening to Music , 2000 .

[56]  Camille Blais-Rochette,et al.  Towards a cultural-developmental psychology of music in adolescence , 2015 .

[57]  B. Simons-Morton,et al.  Dance Is the New Metal: Adolescent Music Preferences and Substance Use Across Europe , 2012, Substance use & misuse.

[58]  Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic,et al.  The relationship between affect, uses of music, and music preferences in a sample of South African adolescents , 2012 .

[59]  M. Leary,et al.  Self-presentational persona: simultaneous management of multiple impressions. , 2011, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[60]  Paul D. Ellis,et al.  The essential guide to effect sizes : statistical power, meta-analysis, and the interpretation of research results , 2010 .

[61]  M. Snyder Self-monitoring of expressive behavior. , 1974 .

[62]  M. Leary,et al.  Self-Presentational Concerns in Older Adults: Implications for Health and Well-Being , 2000, Special Issue: The Social Psychology of Aging.

[63]  James Tilley,et al.  Ageing and generational effects on vote choice: Combining cross-sectional and panel data to estimate APC effects , 2014 .

[64]  Koen van Eijck,et al.  Social Differentiation in Musical Taste Patterns , 2001 .

[65]  Peter J. Rentfrow,et al.  The Role of Music in Everyday Life: Current Directions in the Social Psychology of Music , 2012 .

[66]  Chip Heath,et al.  Who Drives Divergence? Identity-Signaling, Outgroup Dissimilarity, and the Abandonment of Cultural Tastes , 2008, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[67]  Raymond MacDonald,et al.  Broadcasting personalities: The relationship between occupation and music preferences in the BBC Radio programme Desert Island Discs , 2017 .

[68]  N. Ziv Music and compliance: Can good music make us do bad things? , 2016 .

[69]  S. Gosling,et al.  Message in a Ballad , 2006, Psychological science.

[70]  Don G. Bouwhuis,et al.  Toward a better understanding of the relation between music preference, listening behavior, and personality , 2012 .

[71]  E ARTICL,et al.  The content and validity of music-genre stereotypes among college students , 2008 .

[72]  Daniel J. Ozer,et al.  Correlation and the coefficient of determination , 1985 .

[73]  Dave Miranda,et al.  Rap Music Genres and Deviant Behaviors in French-Canadian Adolescents , 2004 .

[74]  D. Hargreaves The developmental psychology of music , 1987 .

[75]  D. Ozer Evaluating effect size in personality research. , 2007 .

[76]  G. Lewis Cultural socialization and the development of taste cultures and culture classes in American popular music: Existing evidence and proposed research directions 1 , 1975 .

[77]  John E. Cornell,et al.  Clinical Validation of the Quality of Life Inventory: A Measure of Life Satisfaction for Use in Treatment Planning and Outcome Assessment , 1992 .

[78]  Daniel J Levitin,et al.  The structure of musical preferences: a five-factor model. , 2011, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[79]  Justin A. Zupnick,et al.  Cascading Reminiscence Bumps in Popular Music , 2013, Psychological science.

[80]  S. Gangestad,et al.  Self-Monitoring : Appraisal and Reappraisal , 2001 .

[81]  Caroline Walter,et al.  The effect of social feedback on music preference , 2016 .

[82]  William O. Bearden,et al.  Attention to Social Comparison Information: An Individual Difference Factor Affecting Consumer Conformity , 1990 .

[83]  W. Vollebergh,et al.  Is it the music? Peer substance use as a mediator of the link between music preferences and adolescent substance use. , 2010, Journal of adolescence.

[84]  L. Carstensen,et al.  Social and emotional aging. , 2010, Annual review of psychology.

[85]  Adrian C. North,et al.  Musical preference and taste in childhood and adolescence. , 2006 .

[86]  A. Bennett,et al.  Popular music and the aesthetics of ageing , 2012, Popular Music.

[87]  A. Furnham,et al.  Personality, self-estimated intelligence, and uses of music: A Spanish replication and extension using structural equation modeling. , 2009 .

[88]  Julian A. Oldmeadow,et al.  You Are What You Listen To: Young People's Stereotypes about Music Fans , 2009 .

[89]  G. Lewis Taste cultures and musical stereotypes: Mirrors of identity? , 1995 .

[90]  Edward F. Fern,et al.  Intergenerational influence: Roles of conformity to peers and communication effectiveness , 2005 .

[91]  Adrian C. North,et al.  The social psychology of music. , 1997 .

[92]  B. Roberts,et al.  Getting to know me: social role experiences and age differences in self-concept clarity during adulthood. , 2010, Journal of personality.

[93]  Dave Miranda,et al.  Music listening, coping, peer affiliation and depression in adolescence , 2009 .

[94]  Adrian Furnham,et al.  The big five personality traits and uses of music: A replication in Malaysia using structural equation modeling. , 2009 .

[95]  Peter Sedlmeier,et al.  What makes us like music? Determinants of music preference. , 2010 .

[96]  Adrian C. North,et al.  Individual differences in musical taste. , 2010, The American journal of psychology.

[97]  R. Brown,et al.  Music preferences and personality among Japanese university students. , 2012, International journal of psychology : Journal international de psychologie.

[98]  Adrian C. North,et al.  Musical Taste and Ingroup Favouritism , 2009 .

[99]  Noah Mark,et al.  Birds of a Feather Sing Together , 1998 .

[100]  S. Fiske,et al.  Act Your (Old) Age , 2013, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[101]  Adrian C. North,et al.  Lifestyle correlates of musical preference: 2. Media, leisure time and music , 2007 .

[102]  Mark P. Zanna,et al.  Attitude and activity preference similarity: Differential bases of interpersonal attraction for low and high self-monitors. , 1987 .

[103]  M. Kosinski,et al.  Age trends in musical preferences in adulthood: 1. Conceptualization and empirical investigation , 2017 .