Can music define your personality?
Does your music preference reveal information about your personality? Psychology researchers Samuel Gosling and Jason Rentfrow believe so. A study the two conducted revealed that an individual’s musical preference can be reliably sorted into one of four categories and that these preferences are related to personality, intelligence, and values.
According to Gosling, most musical choices fall into one of four categories: Reflective and Complex, Intense and Rebellious, Upbeat and Conventional, or Energetic and Rhythmic.
The study reported that those who enjoyed music in the Reflective and Complex category, which includes classical, jazz, folk and blues, tended to be inventive, had active imaginations, valued aesthetic experiences, were tolerant of others, and politically liberal.
Individuals who preferred alternative, heavy metal, and rock music in the Intense and Rebellious category were inclined to be curious, risk-takers, physically active, and intelligent. Listeners of Upbeat and Conventional music, which includes country, religious and pop music, were outgoing and cheerful, enjoyed helping others, saw themselves as physically attractive, and held conservative views.
Energetic and Rhythmic music consisting of funk, hip-hop, soul, and electronica attracted people who were talkative, energetic, forgiving, and opposed to conservative ideals. They also perceived themselves as physically attractive.
Gosling and Rentfrow collected data by analyzing the music preferences of university students as well as 500 people across the country who used online music file-sharing services. They also developed a new scale to collect the data called the Short Test of Music Preferences (STOMP).
“Most people consider music to be a very important part of their lives and believe that their preferences reveal information about who they are,” Rentfrow says. “Until recently, there was very little empirical evidence to support this idea.”
Adapted from “University researchers find clues to personality traits in musical preferences” Office of Public Affairs
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Short Test Of Music Preferences
Dr. Samuel Gosling
University researchers find clues to personality traits in musical preferences