Music Questionnaire

 Music Preference Analysis

My Research Topic: Music

Target: Regular Students and Exchange Students in Japanese University

Number of Respondents: 47 students


(Summary) Students answered 5 topics (total 12 questions) about music.

Results 

Graph #1: I got 34 regular students and 13 exchange students to do my survey. This means that exchange students accounted for 27.7% of the total 47 respondents. The majority of regular students were from the Faculty of International Studies (19.1%), followed by the Faculty of Literature, Arts and Cultural Studies (14.9%).


Graph #2: The survey showed an almost equal distribution of gender among the 47 respondents, with 48.9% identifying as Male and 48.9% as Female, while a small fraction preferred not to state their gender.


Graph #3: The responses to whether music taste is influenced by home country trends were varied, with the highest frequency (19.1%) recorded for scores 1, 4, and 5. Despite this variance, only 10.6% of respondents chose the highest score of 6, indicating a slight tendency against strong agreement with the statement.


Graph #4: The survey results clearly show that J-POP is the most-listened-to genre, selected by 57.4% of respondents, followed closely by Western Pop at 51.1%. K-POP was the third most popular choice (38.3%), while other genres like R&B and Rock lagged significantly behind, and many niche genres were only selected by 1 to 6 people.


Graph #5: A strong majority of respondents (72.3%) agree that they enjoy listening to music in languages they do not fully understand, with 29.8% strongly agreeing (score 6). This high agreement aligns with the qualitative findings, where many participants indicated that they primarily focus on the melody and rhythm rather than the lyrics.


Graph #6: The vast majority of respondents reported using a dedicated music streaming service, with 78.7% selecting the highest score of 5 (Very Frequently). Overall, 87.2% of the participants agreed or strongly agreed with the statement, confirming the dominant role of streaming platforms in their music consumption.


Graph #7: The majority of respondents listen to music for either one or two hours per day, with two hours being the most frequent answer (34%). Collectively, nearly 60% of the participants (59.5%) fall into the 1-2 hours per day category. A significantly smaller number of people listen for three, four, or more hours, indicating that music listening is generally a moderately time-consuming activity for this group.


Graph #8: The data shows a strong polarization regarding paying for premium music services, with the majority (63.8%) strongly agreeing with the statement. Conversely, a significant portion of respondents (23.4%) strongly disagree, indicating a clear split between those who pay for ad-free listening and those who do not.


Graph #9: The majority of respondents (74.4%) expressed satisfaction with the personalized music recommendations provided by their primary platform. The highest number of participants (34%), selected a score of 4, indicating a generally positive level of satisfaction. Few respondents disagreed, with the only 8.6% selecting scores 1 or 2 (strongly disagree or disagree).




Congratulations, you are the chosen ones who made it to the end of this blog.

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