Members of MEDL at SARC have published an article in the journal of Ecological Psychology
Article Title: How Do Aesthetics Get into Muscles and Muscles into Aesthetics? Insights from Musical Interactions in an Experimental Context
Members of the Music Ecologies Design Lab (MEDL) at SARC have published an article in the journal of Ecological Psychology as part of a special issue on Ecological Aesthetics. MEDL brings together expertise from a range of disciplines to explore complex questions related to the design and performance of musical instruments and the environments with which such practices are entangled.
How Do Aesthetics Get into Muscles and Muscles into Aesthetics? Insights from Musical Interactions in an Experimental Context
Abstract
In certain contexts, processes of perception, action and skill development and those related to aesthetic experiences can have mutual influence upon each other. Concepts from the domains of ecological psychology and aesthetics may therefore be distinct but entangled. These entanglements are explored here through observations from an experiment in which musicians’ behaviours and experiences were recorded while they interacted with a computer music controller instrument operating different modes of sound synthesis. Processes of action-perception exploration and enacting the instrument’s various affordances had an impact upon the musicians’ aesthetic judgements about the instrument, and their imagining its virtual potential for application in music cultural practices. Conversely, musicians’ prior experience in different aesthetic cultures constrained the affordances of the instrument that were discovered and taken up by them. These insights are used to expand upon the different ways that perceptual-motor and social aesthetic processes can constrain and shape each other. Ongoing and further directions for both theoretical and empirical research are highlighted.
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