We investigated whether brief music-preference probes index variation in subthreshold depressive tendencies using a controlled “sister-piece” paradigm. Twenty-nine university students rated liking for 16 classical excerpts in which melody, harmony, and texture were held constant while mode (major/minor) and tempo (fast/slow) were orthogonally manipulated. From these ratings, we derived Mode and Tempo Preference Indices (MPI and TPI) and examined associations with depressive score (log-QIDS-J) as a continuous, non-diagnostic measure. When aggregated across pieces, neither MPI nor TPI showed a statistically reliable association with depressive score, although correlations were consistently negative. However, the TPI-depressive score association for Swan Lake strengthened and reached significance after a prespecified influence-restricted analysis. Supplementary dichotomized group comparisons showed higher depressive scores in minor- and slow-preference groups within a subthreshold range. Together, these findings indicate that controlled mode and tempo preferences may capture meaningful variation in subthreshold depressive tendencies, although derived from a small, nonclinical sample.
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Ryohei P. HASEGAWA
Toya UEHARA
Hideki SAKAI
International Journal of Affective Engineering
Nagoya University
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
Tokyo University of Science
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HASEGAWA et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c770418bbfbc51511e0804 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5057/ijae.ijae-d-25-00052