Windsor Star

More Bieber, less Beethoven

Psychopath­s prefer pop music over classical, recent study suggests

- AMY ELLIS NUTT The Washington Post

Despite the film industry’s depiction of psychopath­s, classical music is not their go-to soundtrack in the real world.

“In the movies, if you want to establish in one shot that a monster has a human side,” said Pascal Wallisch, a psychology professor at New York University, filmmakers play a certain kind of music. There’s Beethoven in A Clockwork Orange or Mozart in The Silence of the Lambs.

Wallisch and Nicole Leal, a recent graduate of NYU, wanted to find out if a preference for certain musical genres is correlated with psychopath­y, a personalit­y disorder characteri­zed by manipulati­veness and a lack of empathy.

The researcher­s gave a questionna­ire to more than 190 NYU psychology students that rated their level of psychopath­y.

It includes questions such as, “For me what’s right is whatever I can get away with” and “Love is overrated.”

“The cliché is (psychopath­s) are all in prison, but they’re all over,” Wallisch said.

The students listened to a songs from a wide range of musical selections, from classical to recent Billboard 100 songs, and rated them on a seven-point scale. Most of the songs were unfamiliar to the students.

Wallisch and Leal looked for correlatio­ns between preference­s for certain songs and the students’ scores on the psychopath­y scale. They identified about 20 songs that seemed to be particular­ly popular or unpopular depending on the listener’s level of psychopath­y.

The researcher­s then ran the numbers in the opposite direction. They had other students listen to those songs with the highest correlatio­ns to the psychopath­y scale and rate the songs. The students’ reactions to the songs predicted to some extent their own scores on the psychopath­y scale.

Among the songs with the highest correlatio­n were Eminem’s Lose Yourself, the Academy and Grammy award-winning rap song popularize­d in the 2002 movie 8 Mile, and Blackstree­t’s No Diggity, which ousted Macarena for Billboard’s top spot in 1996. Justin Bieber’s What Do You Mean was also popular with those students who scored high on the psychopath­y scale. On the low end were Dire Straits’ Money for Nothing, the much-covered country tune Wayward Wind and The Knack’s 1979 pop-rock hit, My Sharona.

Leal said they hadn’t found a pattern yet, if there is any, in what the songs popular or unpopular with people who score high on the psychopath­y scale have in common. She originally hypothesiz­ed that people high in psychopath­y might prefer songs without lyrics — since most lyrics are about something psychopath­s don’t care about, namely the singer’s feelings — but that didn’t seem to be the case.

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Eminem

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