The urge to move in response to music, combined with the positive affect associated with the coupling of sensory and motor processes while engaging with music (referred to as sensorimotor coupling) in a seemingly effortless way, is commonly described as the feeling of "being in the groove." Here we systematically explore this compelling phenomenon in a population of young adults. We utilize multiple levels of analysis, comprising phenomenological, behavioral and computational techniques. Specifically, we show (1) that the concept of the groove is widely appreciated and understood in terms of a pleasurable drive toward action, (2) that a broad range of musical excerpts can be appraised reliably for the degree of perceived groove, (3) that ...
Groove, as a musical quality, is an important part of jazz and pop music appreciative prac...
Music often evokes spontaneous movements in listeners that are synchronized with the music, a phenom...
Spontaneous rhythmical movements, like foot-tapping and head-bobbing, often emerge when people liste...
The urge to move in response to music, combined with the positive affect associated with the couplin...
The urge to move in response to music, combined with the positive affect associated with the couplin...
Movement, perception, and reward are fundamental processes underlying much of our behaviour which, a...
‘Groove’ can be understood as the (pleasurable) urge to move to music. Predictive accounts of music ...
In many musical cultures, people synchronise their bodies to the rhythmic patterns of the music, and...
Groove is a popular and widely used concept in the field of music. Yet, its precise definition remai...
Is beat salience an accurate way to measure groove? Does personal identification with the music affe...
The pleasurable desire to move to music, also known as groove, is modulated by rhythmic complexity. ...
This dissertation investigates the predictive and dynamic mechanisms underlying rhythm processing an...
The capacity to entrain motor action to rhythmic auditory stimulation is highly developed in humans ...
Moving to the groove of the music is a phenomenal and universal human behavior. Common characteristi...
Theories of music and emotion suggest that subjective affective experience and physiological arousal...
Groove, as a musical quality, is an important part of jazz and pop music appreciative prac...
Music often evokes spontaneous movements in listeners that are synchronized with the music, a phenom...
Spontaneous rhythmical movements, like foot-tapping and head-bobbing, often emerge when people liste...
The urge to move in response to music, combined with the positive affect associated with the couplin...
The urge to move in response to music, combined with the positive affect associated with the couplin...
Movement, perception, and reward are fundamental processes underlying much of our behaviour which, a...
‘Groove’ can be understood as the (pleasurable) urge to move to music. Predictive accounts of music ...
In many musical cultures, people synchronise their bodies to the rhythmic patterns of the music, and...
Groove is a popular and widely used concept in the field of music. Yet, its precise definition remai...
Is beat salience an accurate way to measure groove? Does personal identification with the music affe...
The pleasurable desire to move to music, also known as groove, is modulated by rhythmic complexity. ...
This dissertation investigates the predictive and dynamic mechanisms underlying rhythm processing an...
The capacity to entrain motor action to rhythmic auditory stimulation is highly developed in humans ...
Moving to the groove of the music is a phenomenal and universal human behavior. Common characteristi...
Theories of music and emotion suggest that subjective affective experience and physiological arousal...
Groove, as a musical quality, is an important part of jazz and pop music appreciative prac...
Music often evokes spontaneous movements in listeners that are synchronized with the music, a phenom...
Spontaneous rhythmical movements, like foot-tapping and head-bobbing, often emerge when people liste...