Macht uns Musik selbstbewusster? Wie beeinflusst die Anwesenheit von Smartphones unsere Gespräche? Und: Bringt Powerposing wirklich was?
Vielen Dank an meinen Gesprächspartner:
In dieser Folge habe ich unter anderem diese Quellen benutzt:
Bernardi et al.: Cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and respiratory changes induced by different types of music in musicians and non‐musicians: the importance of silence (Heart, 2006)
Blood & Zatorre: Intensely pleasurable responses to music correlate with activity in brain regions implicated in reward and emotion (PNAS, 2001)
Boksem et al.: Social power and approach-related neural activity (Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 2012)
Burzynska et al.: Taste the Bass: Low Frequencies Increase the Perception of Body and Aromatic Intensity in Red Wine (Multisens Res., 2019)
Einfluss unterschiedlicher Musikstile auf Verhalten und Herz-Kreislauf-System, eine tierexperimentelle Studie bei Schweinen (Universität Gießen)
Elvers et al.: Music listening as self-enhancement: Effects of empowering music on momentary explicit and implicit self-esteem (Psychology of Music, 2017)
Hsu et al.: The Music of Power: Perceptual and Behavioral Consequences of Powerful Music (Social Psychological and Personality Science, 2014)
Lenc et al.: Neural tracking of the musical beat is enhanced by low-frequency sounds (PNAS, 2018)
Music on the Brain (TEDx)
Reybrouck et al.: Music and Noise: Same or Different? What Our Body Tells Us (Front Psychol., 2019)
Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (Fetzer Institute)
Salimpoor et al.: Interactions Between the Nucleus Accumbens and Auditory Cortices Predict Music Reward Value (Science, 2013)
Sigurdardóttir et al.: A pilot study on high amplitude low frequency-music impulse stimulation as an add-on treatment for depression (Brain Behav., 2019)
25% der Millennial-Generation verbringen mehr als 5 Stunden täglich am Handy
(Presseportal)
Brown et al.: Tempted to Text: College Students’ Mobile Phone Use During a Face-to-Face Interaction With a Close Friend (Emerging Adulthood, 2016)
Dwyer et al.: Smartphone use undermines enjoyment of face-to-face social interactions (Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 2018)
Humphreys: Cellphones in public: social interactions in a wireless era (New Media & Society, 2005)
Lepp et al.: The relationship between cell phone use, academic performance, anxiety, and Satisfaction with Life in college students (Computers in Human Behavior, 2014)
Misra et al.: The iPhone Effect: The Quality of In-Person Social Interactions in the Presence of Mobile Devices (Environment and Behavior, 2014)
Wie viel Zeit verbringen Sie täglich an Ihrem Smartphone? (Statista)
Cesario et al.: CRSP special issue on power poses: what was the point and what did we learn? (Comprehensive Results in Social Psychology, 2017)
Crede: A Negative Effect of a Contractive Pose is not Evidence for the Positive Effect of an Expansive Pose: Comment on Cuddy, Schultz, and Fosse (2018) (Meta-Psychology, 2019)
