Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Mustafa Hilmi Bulut , Chi-Keung Victor Fung , Lisa J. Lehmberg , Yeliz Kindap Tepe , Patrick Hernly , Yusuf Özgül , Esmira Mehdiyev , Zekeriya Kaptan
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Cumhuriyet University, Imaret/Merkez/Sivas, Turkey, University of South Florida, Tampa, USA, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA, St. Petersburg College, FL, USA
ANO 2022
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO SAGE Open
ISSN 2158-2440
E-ISSN 2158-2440
DOI 10.1177/21582440221139468
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18

Resumo

The personality trait of openness has been shown to contribute to a person's ability to function effectively. Additionally, scholars have suggested that openness to experience and foreign language experience were related to music preference. Extending from earlier scholarship, this study examined the relationship between openness to experience and the various types of musical and language experiences reported by undergraduate music majors in Turkey and the United States. Participants ( N = 380) were surveyed using the Openness to Experience domain of the NEO-PI-R and an author-designed survey with questions about participants' musical backgrounds and interests, foreign language abilities, age, and sex. Results showed that U.S. students rated significantly higher in four of the five dimensions of the Openness domain than their Turkish counterparts (Wilks'λ = .57; F(5, 374) = 55.37, p < .001). Factor analysis results showed that (a) experiences in foreign languages, (b) listening to Turkish traditional, pop, and folk music, and (c) listening to American (pop and folk) and Western classical music cumulatively explained 68.49% of the variance in openness. Correlation analyses suggested that listening to Western classical, American folk, and American pop music was associated with higher openness scores, and listening to Turkish traditional, folk, and pop music was associated with lower openness scores. Additionally, the number of foreign languages participants studied correlated with four of the dimensions. Results suggest that both groups could benefit from increased, broader, and deeper exposure to different musical genres from diverse cultures.

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