HYPOTHESIS AND THEORY article
Front. Psychol.
Sec. Emotion Science
This article is part of the Research TopicBasic and Complex Emotions: State of the Art and New HorizonsView all articles
Music-Induced Emotion as Controlled Hallucination: An Active Interoceptive Inference Account
Provisionally accepted- National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan
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Music is widely recognized as a powerful elicitor of embodied emotion, yet the precise mechanisms by which auditory patterns are translated into specific bodily feelings remain underspecified. Existing models of contagion and entrainment often lack granular mappings between musical features and distinct interoceptive states. This article proposes a novel theoretical framework viewing musical emotion as an instance of active interoceptive inference. I argue that musical structures (e.g., rhythm, dynamics, timbre) function as "pseudo-interoceptive" evidence. Within a hierarchical generative model, the brain integrates these cues with actual physiological signals and extramusical context to infer the somatic state of a "virtual body" implied by the music. Conceptually, this approach extends bottom-up theories by emphasizing top-down predictions. It is posited that the resulting conscious experience is a composite: it blends the listener's genuine physiological arousal—serving as an energetic substrate—with the simulated affective qualia of the virtual persona. To illustrate this, principled mappings are proposed between musical parameters and internal states, specifically focusing on cardiac and pain-like sensations. Analyses of works by Mozart, Schubert, Berlioz, Beethoven, and Verdi demonstrate how composers manipulate these cues to drive a relatively high level of precision-weighted prediction error, thereby sustaining attention and fostering immersion as the music unfolds. Ultimately, this framework redefines music-induced emotion as a "controlled hallucination" of bodily change, offering new insights into aesthetic empathy and the therapeutic potential of music.
Keywords: active inference, crossmodalcorrespondence, interoception, music theory, musical emotion, predictive coding
Received: 03 Dec 2025; Accepted: 15 Jan 2026.
Copyright: © 2026 Tsai. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
* Correspondence: Chen-Gia Tsai
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