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A study of children's musical preference: a data mining approach

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 22:37 authored by Bonnie Yim, Yee Ling BooYee Ling Boo, Marjory Ebbeck
Musical preference has long been a research interest in the field of music education, and studies consistently confirm the importance of musical preference in one's musical learning experiences. However, only a limited number of studies have been focussed on the field of early childhood education (e.g., Hargreaves, North, & Tarrant, 2006; Roulston, 2006). Further, among these limited early childhood studies, few of them discuss children's musical preference in both the East and the West. There is very limited literature (e.g., Faulkner et al., 2010; Szymanska, 2012) which explores the data by using a data mining approach. This study aims to bridge the research gaps by examining children's musical preference in Hong Kong and in South Australia by applying a data mining technique - Self Organizing Maps (SOM), which is a clustering method that groups similar data objects together. The application of SOM is new in the field of early childhood education and also in the study of children's musical preference. This paper specifically aims to expand a previous study (Yim & Ebbeck, 2009) by conducting deeper investigations into the existing datasets, for the purpose of uncovering insights that have not been identified through data mining approach.

History

Journal

Australian Journal of Teacher Education

Volume

39

Number

2

Issue

2

Start page

21

End page

34

Total pages

14

Publisher

Edith Cowan University

Place published

Australia

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006054774

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-08-18

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