| Results: details |
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INFRASONIC - SUMMARY OF RESULTS 31 May 2003 PROCEDURE This paper outlines the results of a highly unusual experiment that was staged during two contemporary music concerts. Although the concerts consisted of audible sound, two pieces in each event were laced with infrasound—extreme bass sound, below 20Hz in frequency. Infrasound is of considerable interest to psychologists, acousticians and musical scholars as it is used in sacred organ music and has been implicated in the strange feelings experienced at ostensibly haunted sites (Tandy and Lawrence, 1998). Our experiment took place at the Purcell Room, London. It was based around a concert for live piano and electronics. Some of the music in the concert was laced with infrasound, produced by an infrasound generator, designed and built for the experiment. The infrasound had a fundamental frequency of 17Hz. |
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Questionnaires were handed out to the audience at the beginning
of the concert. Before each concert, audience members were asked to indicate
their present emotion on four scales (Happy–Sad, Aroused–Sleepy, Excited–Bored, Angry–Calm). At four points
in the concert, labelled A, B, C and D, they were asked to assess their
emotional response to the piece they had just heard, using these four
scales. In addition, they were asked to report any unusual
experiences, rate their intensity and state whether they thought the infrasound
was present or absent during the piece. In each concert, infrasound
was present during two of the four pieces under test. In
Concert 1 ( Demographic Data In total, around 700 people attended these concerts.
Of these, 522 people completed a questionnaire and left it in the auditorium,
enabling us to count their responses in our analysis. We were able to collect 278 questionnaires in
Concert 1 and 244 in Concert 2. The 522 respondents consisted of 298 males and 224
females. Their ages ranged from under 15 to over 40. Here’s a summary
of their demographic details:
Musical background 72% of all audience members considered themselves musical
although only 21% had a music qualification above Grade 1. Paranormal belief The graph below shows the spread of answers to the question
‘Do you believe in the existence of paranormal phenomena? i.e. phenomena that
appear to be beyond normal explanation, such as telepathy or fortune telling?’. This reveals 42% of the sample population probably or
definitely believe in the paranormal, whilst 22% are uncertain. This concurs with a recent poll which puts the figure at over 50% (Daily Mail, Feb. 2, 1998). Do you believe in the existence of paranormal
phenomena? Emotional response This
graph below shows the audience’s emotion prior to the start of the concert,
using each of the four emotion scales Happy-Sad:
H-S; Aroused-Sleepy A-S; Excited-Bored E-B and Angry-Calm A-C. The red line shows the
emotions during Concert 1. The green lines show the emotions during Concert
2. Generally
speaking, audience members were happy
(mean of 26 and 29 respectively),
slightly aroused (46 & 45),
excited (31 & 33), and
calm (72 & 74), during the concerts. There is no significant
difference between the audiences’ emotional states in the two concerts.
This counters the explanation that any variation in response to the pieces
could be due to a difference between the audiences.
The
four graphs below indicate the baseline (i.e. present emotion) for each
emotion scale and the
mean response following each piece (A, B, C and D). Although there are expected differences between
the pieces (e.g. between piece C and D on the aroused-sleepy scale) and increases or decreases compared to the baseline,
there are no significant differences between the two concerts. This suggests
there is no change in emotional response due to the presence of infrasound.
Unusual experiences Many
unusual experiences were reported during the concerts, ranging from the
emotional (e.g. ‘sense of sorrow’, ‘brief moment of anxiety’, ‘excited’)
to the physiological (e.g. ‘increased heart-rate’, ‘headache’, ‘tingling
in neck and shoulders’, ‘nausea’, ‘sense of coldness’). The majority of
reported experiences were physiological. The
number of experiences after each piece varied:
the total number of experiences reported after Piece A was 376;
Piece B: 488; Piece C: 498 and Piece D: 234.
Piece A In Concert 1, 19%
of people that thought it was present in piece A
(infrasound absent) compared to 31% in Concert 2 (infrasound present). 51% of people in Concert 1 reported one or more
unusual experiences after listening to piece A (infrasound absent), compared
to 60% in Concert 2 (infrasound present). Piece B In Concert 1, 37%
of people that thought it was present in piece
B (infrasound present) compared to 32% in Concert 2 (infrasound absent). 60% of people in Concert 1 reported one or more
unusual experiences after listening to piece B (infrasound present), compared
to 62% in Concert 2 (infrasound absent). Piece C In Concert 1, 32%
of people that thought it was present in piece
C (infrasound absent) compared to 39% in Concert 2 (infrasound present). 60% of people in Concert 1 reported one or more
unusual experiences after listening to piece C (infrasound absent), compared
to 65% in Concert 2 (infrasound present). Piece D In Concert 1, 27%
of people that thought it was present in piece
D (infrasound present) compared to 9% in Concert 2 (infrasound absent). 39% of people in Concert 1 reported one or more
unusual experiences after listening to piece D (infrasound present), compared
to just 28% in Concert 2 (infrasound absent). Comparing the pieces With the exception of Piece B, there is a significant correlation
(at the 0.05 level) between number of experiences reported and the presence
of infrasound. This can be interpreted in several ways: In pieces A &
D, for example (where the biggest difference in the percentage detecting
infrasound occurred), it is possible that people were conscious of the
infrasound and this caused them to think that they were having an unusual
experience (i.e. via some form of suggestion). Alternatively, they may
have genuinely experienced something unusual and then attributed this
to the presence of the infrasound. One
method of testing this is to conduct a partial (first-order) correlation,
using the same variables, whilst controlling for the audience members’
recorded detection of infrasound. The
results from this particular analysis show a significant correlation (for
Pieces A & D), meaning infrasound actually evoked a response. This is supported, given the reported intensity
of the audience’s experiences. Intensity of experience The graph below shows
the mean intensity (on a 7-point likert scale, where 1=mild intensity and 7=extreme
intensity) for the primary unusual experience reported after each
of the four pieces. Despite there being a steady increase in average intensity
for the audience in Concert 2, the interesting values are the mean intensity
ratings for audience members in Piece B (it is significantly different
than Concert 1) and Piece D. These
intensity ratings increase at the appropriate point in the concert,
i.e. the mean intensity is higher when infrasound is present (B&D). This project was funded conducted by a multi-disciplinary
team, headed by engineer and composer Sarah Angliss. Team members
included psychologists Ciarán O’Keeffe ( The
team would like to thank Dr Emma Greening, Louise Clark, Gaëlle
Villejoubert, and Dr Mike Page for their contribution
to the analysis of the data, outlined in this report. Tandy, V. & Lawrence, T.R. (1998), "The Ghost in the Machine",
Journal of the Society for Psychical
Research, Vol 62, No 851 Juslin, P. &
Sloboda, J. A. (Eds.). (2001) Music and Emotion: Theory and
Research. This document was |
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