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A computational lens into how music characterizes genre in film

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  • Benjamin Ma
  • Timothy Greer
  • Dillon Knox
  • Shrikanth Narayanan

Abstract

Film music varies tremendously across genre in order to bring about different responses in an audience. For instance, composers may evoke passion in a romantic scene with lush string passages or inspire fear throughout horror films with inharmonious drones. This study investigates such phenomena through a quantitative evaluation of music that is associated with different film genres. We construct supervised neural network models with various pooling mechanisms to predict a film’s genre from its soundtrack. We use these models to compare handcrafted music information retrieval (MIR) features against VGGish audio embedding features, finding similar performance with the top-performing architectures. We examine the best-performing MIR feature model through permutation feature importance (PFI), determining that mel-frequency cepstral coefficient (MFCC) and tonal features are most indicative of musical differences between genres. We investigate the interaction between musical and visual features with a cross-modal analysis, and do not find compelling evidence that music characteristic of a certain genre implies low-level visual features associated with that genre. Furthermore, we provide software code to replicate this study at https://github.com/usc-sail/mica-music-in-media. This work adds to our understanding of music’s use in multi-modal contexts and offers the potential for future inquiry into human affective experiences.

Suggested Citation

  • Benjamin Ma & Timothy Greer & Dillon Knox & Shrikanth Narayanan, 2021. "A computational lens into how music characterizes genre in film," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 16(4), pages 1-14, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0249957
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0249957
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