• Title/Summary/Keyword: 음악적 경험

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Empathy With Music From a Selfobject Perspective (음악공감경험 분석: 자기대상(selfobject) 개념을 중심으로)

  • Choi, Jin Hee;Chong, Hyun Ju
    • Journal of Music and Human Behavior
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    • v.18 no.2
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    • pp.1-17
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    • 2021
  • Using Kohut's selfobject perspective as a foundation, this qualitative study explored the empathy with music and analyzed the empirical meanings in relation to 'Mirroring selfobject need', 'Idealized selfobject need', and 'Twinship selfobject need'. The participants included 13 music therapy graduate students who took part in individual interviews about their musical experiences. The interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed via content analysis. As a result, seven categories with 16 meaningful concepts emerged under three dimensions: Gratification of selfobject need for mirroring, gratification of selfobject need for idealization, and gratification of selfobject need for twinship. Participants described experiencing unconditional understanding and acceptance from music, feeling stronger and safer in music, and being identified with and connected to music. These findings suggest that participants continuously gratify their selfobject needs by expanding the self and empathizing themselves through music. This study in significant in that it is the first qualitative study to analyze participants' musical experiences from Kohut's selfobject perspective.

A Qualitative Inquiry on Group Music and Imagery Experiences (그룹 음악과 심상 경험에 대한 질적 사례연구)

  • Kim, Aimee Jeehae
    • Journal of Music and Human Behavior
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    • v.17 no.2
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    • pp.101-117
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    • 2020
  • This study aimed to investigate music and imagery (MI) experiences in group settings using a qualitative case study approach. For this purpose, a focus group interview was conducted with four professional music therapists, who participated in peer MI group sessions without a therapist. Data collected from the interview were analyzed by qualitative data analysis procedures. Results demonstrated that successful group music experiences in the early stages, such as sharing and selecting music together within the group or experiencing group support, leaded to developing trust towards music and the group in participants. Moreover, the trust built upon such basis was shown to facilitate expansions in emotional experiences, imageries, relational aspects, and music resources, which led to new personal insights. In addition, the participants recognized the supportive nature of the group played a role of encouraging participants to challenge new experiences during MI experiences. The results suggest that group as a therapeutic factor can promote expansive emotional experiences and insights. Furthermore, the findings may provide implications for music psychotherapy applications in group settings.

The Aspect of Music Therapists' Experiences in Countertransference and Countertransference Management Ability (음악치료사의 역전이 경험 양상과 역전이 관리 능력)

  • Yi, So Young
    • Journal of Music and Human Behavior
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    • v.5 no.1
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    • pp.19-45
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    • 2008
  • The purpose of this study was to offer fundamental data to manage countertransference, and to research into countertransference management ability by aspects in therapists' experiences in countertransference and their professional characters. For the paper, a survey was conducted on 62 music therapists who provided professional music therapy after finishing graduate school of music therapy through clinical practice and internship, and the result was drawn as follows. Around 84% of participants answered that they had been in trouble by countertransference in the analysis of a questionnaire regarding experience in countertransference. 48% among them first experienced countertransference during the practice in graduate school. 27% and 14% respectively answered that they experienced it within 3 years after graduation and during internship. Also, the result showed that therapists usually had difficulty with adults with mental disease, and the second most difficult clients were children with developmental disabilities. 76% of participants who had difficulty by countertransference answered that they were able to manage it to some degree, and almost all who answered thought that research into countertransference and management were necessary. About the question as to how to manage countertransference, 54% suggested self-analysis and self-therapy. 33% answered that countertransference should be treated through supervision. Finally, 13% of participants answered that it should be handled in graduate school. In this paper, which empirically examined therapists' experience in countertransference and countertransference management ability had meaning in providing essential basic data for music therapists to apply and manage countertransference for therapists themselves, as well as for clients.

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A Qualitative Analysis of the Role of Music Contributing to Catharsis During Music Experience (음악 체험에서 카타르시스 경험에 기여한 음악의 역할에 대한 질적 분석)

  • Choi, Jin Hee;Chong, Hyun Ju
    • Journal of Music and Human Behavior
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    • v.20 no.1
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    • pp.1-19
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    • 2023
  • This study explored the role and characteristics of music that contributed to experiences of catharsis in music. An empirical phenomenological study was conducted to explore catharsis with 12 adults. Phenomenological reduction, change of attitude, literature interpretation, and hermeneutic circle were used for data collection and analysis. As a result, three categories, five themes, and 11 sub-themes were identified. The first category, here and now in music consisted of two themes: aesthetic experiences and expansion of musical novelty. The second category, inner connection through music consisted of one theme, re-experience of internal emotions. The third category, immersion and engagement in music consisted of two themes: ventilating or deepening of emotions and internal dynamics. Based on these results, the cathartic characteristics of music are discussed. First, the aesthetics and novelty of music kept participants fully stay in music. Second, music induced a re-experiencing of emotions by triggering memories or stimulating unresolved emotions. Third, the elements of music promoted emotional ventilation, deepening, and internal dynamics. This study is meaningful because it qualitatively examined the roles and characteristics of music that contribute to cathartic experience in the general adult population.

Analytical elements in Guided Imagery and Music (GIM) Programs: From Psychoanalytical and Existential Aspects (정신분석적 및 존재론적 측면을 중심으로 한 GIM 음악분석)

  • Chong, Hyun Ju
    • Journal of Music and Human Behavior
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    • v.3 no.2
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    • pp.59-68
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    • 2006
  • The purpose of this paper is to provide basic guidelines for listening and analyzing GIM music literature. Many GIM practitioners have developed listening guidelines for GIM music literature, however, there needs to be a more structured guidelines and criteria for beginning GIM trainees. This paper has utilized the psychoanalytic and existential analysis of musical elements suggested by Bruscia, which focuses on the rhythmic and tonal components of musical elements. These components deal with the energy level and emotional depth embedded in the music, which are important essences in imagery experiences. The paper further reviewed various approaches of analyzing music which are musical, phenomenological, and heuristic. These approaches include both musical analysis and analyzer's subjective experiences of music. However, it is more essential firstly to understand the basic musical criteria in relation to psychoanalytic and existential aspects before going into subjective experiences of music listening for the beginning GIM trainees.

A Multiple Case Study on the Relationship Between School Music Experiences and Motivation for Music Engagement Among Adults in 20s (학교 음악 경험과 20대 성인의 음악 생활화 동기에 관한 다중사례 연구)

  • Choi, Chi Hyun;Jung, Joo Yeon
    • Journal of Music and Human Behavior
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    • v.21 no.1
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    • pp.1-27
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    • 2024
  • This study investigates the link between music integration in the lives of adults in their twenties and their school music experiences. Ten individuals in their twenties were interviewed to explore their experiences based on the self-determination theory's fundamental psychological needs (autonomy, competence, and relatedness). Participants were categorized into an active music engagement group (5 individuals) and an inactive group (5 individuals) for individual interviews. Transcripts were analyzed following the five steps of grounded theory data analysis technique. Results indicated a strong connection between music activities during school years and current motivation for music integration, associated with the fulfillment of psychological needs outlined in the self-determination theory. Particularly, this study identified the instructional methods, school music activities, and performance evaluations as closely related to autonomy, competence, and relatedness. It offers a comprehensive analysis of how experiences in these areas during school music activities correlate with values and motivations for music integration in adulthood. Additionally, the study suggests ways to promote the voluntary incorporation of music into life through positive experiences of autonomy, competence, and relatedness in music activities.

The Music Listener's Experience of Listening to Music Changed by the COVID-19 Pandemic (코로나19 팬데믹이 변화시킨 음악 수용자의 음악 청취 경험)

  • Choe, Hee-Jin
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.21 no.11
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    • pp.281-293
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    • 2021
  • The purpose of this study is to analyze how Corona daily life has changed the music listeners' music listening experience and what meaning the music listeners are discovering in their music listening experience. This study considered the sociology of music, and music as a medium of perception and consciousness from a theoretical perspective. After that, the purpose of this study was to extract the meaning of subjective interpretations of music listening tendencies and music listening experiences for college students who took music-related classes from 20 to 24 years old. The research methods were written interview and free discussion analysis. As a result of the study, 76% of those interviewed in writing answered that their tendency to select music in daily life had changed. The main reasons were: First, finding a utopia in 'home' with music, second, finding and listening to new music with increasing time, third, getting out of 'corona blue' with music. College students were discovering new meanings in physical isolation through listening to music. They were discovering the meaning of 'self-healing' in listening to music, and they were changing the direction of their desired consciousness and emotions through music.

Juvenile Offenders' Experience of Music Therapy within the Framework of Self-determination: A Modified Grounded Theory Study (조건부 기소유예 판결을 받은 학교폭력 가해 청소년의 음악치료 경험에 관한 연구: 자기결정성을 중심으로)

  • Yun, Juri
    • Journal of Music and Human Behavior
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.63-82
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    • 2014
  • This qualitative study investigated how a music therapy program was experienced by juvenile offenders of school violence who were under a conditional suspension of indictment. Six adolescents participated in 12 consecutive weeks of group music therapy sessions, and were interviewed individually based on open-ended questions addressing key constructs of self-determination theory, which are autonomy, competence and relatedness. Using this framework, data was deductively analyzed using a modified grounded theory. The analysis also investigated how such impact of music therapy transferred or expanded to their everyday life. The analysis revealed that the properties of autonomy included making choices of songs and instruments, deciding how to play, and expressing opinions about music. Competence was associated with developing skills on musical instruments, creating own music, concentrating on their own project, and demonstrating their abilities. Relatedness were related to collaborating, exchanging opinions, and playing a part in musical projects. In addition, it was found that they also experienced shifts in consciousness and behavior, expanded self-awareness, and mutual exchange and group support. Lastly, it was revealed that the positive emotional and behavioral changes they experienced in music also appeared in their school life.

User Experience Analysis on Music Phone: based on FGI across five countries (뮤직폰 사용자 경험에 대한 5개국 FGI 분석)

  • Yoon, Yee-Eun;Hwang, Byeong-Cheol
    • 한국HCI학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2007.02b
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    • pp.91-98
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    • 2007
  • 본 연구는 사용자에게 친숙한 (user-friendly) 뮤직폰을 디자인하기 위하여, 실제 사용자들을 대상으로 일반적인 음악에 대한 경험 및 뮤직폰을 비롯, MP3 플레이어와 같은 포터블 뮤직 디바이스에 대한 경험을 조사 분석한 것이다. 조사 방법으로는 Focus Group Interview 와 설문이 사용되었으며, 한국을 포함하여 일본, 미국, 영국, 이탈리아 등 5개국 사용자들을 대상으로 동시에 실시되었다. 각 지역의 서로 다른 사용자 특성을 비교 분석하기 위하여 모두 동일한 진행 방법 및 조사 문항을 이용하였다. 대상자는 뮤직폰의 목표 사용자층을 고려하여 각국에서 2~30대의 남녀 5~8명을 선정하였다. 조사 결과, 5개국 공통으로 존재하는 사용자 경험 및 요청사항이 다수 발견되었으며, 이를 통해 뮤직에 대한 경험이 매우 보편적인 경험임을 확인하였다. 음악에 대한 경험에서는 PC를 음악 파일 저장 및 관리에 사용하는 관리 행태가, 뮤직폰에 대해서는 하드웨어적인 향상 니즈가 대표적인 공통점이었다. 또한, 자주 사용하는 기능이나 선호하는 인터랙션에 있어서는 국가 간, 지역 간 공통점과 함께 차이점도 발견되었다. 본 연구는 이러한 조사 결과를 분석하고, 이를 바탕으로 뮤직폰의 사용자 경험을 향상시킬 수 있는 가이드를 제시하고자 한다.

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A Phenomenological Study of Music Therapist's Experiences of Using Voice (음악치료사의 목소리 사용 경험에 대한 현상학적 연구)

  • Shin, JinHee;So, HyeJin
    • Journal of Korea Entertainment Industry Association
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    • v.13 no.2
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    • pp.155-167
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    • 2019
  • The aim of this study was to examine the experiences of music therapists in using their voice clinically. The researcher conducted in-depth interviews with seven music therapists who were able to explain their experiences in using voice. Each interview was analyzed using the phenomenological method of Amedeo Giorgi. The data analysis yielded 9 sub-categories and 6 components: "promotion of various feelings due to clinical use of voice", "voice use depending on the therapist's personality", "voice use for therapy", "positive musical experiences with clients in using voice", "difficulty in using voice as a tool for music therapy", and "attempt to change unsatisfactory voice". The result showed that the music therapists had both positive and difficult experiences with their clients in using their voice. Their instances of perceived unsatisfactory voice prompted them to develop themselves personally and professionally. This study is intended to provide a general understanding of voice use by music therapists and offer a solid basis for music therapists to study voice in the future.