Quote Surfing in Music and Movies with an Emotional Flavor
Vasco Serra and Teresa Chambel
LASIGE, Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal
Keywords: Songs, Lyrics, Movies, Quotes, Time, Memory, Emotions, Explore, Compare, Interactive Media Access,
Synchronicity and Serendipity.
Abstract: We all go through the situation where we listen to a movie or a song lyrics quote and without giving it much
thought, immediately know where it comes from, like an instant and often emotional memory. It is also very
common to be in the opposite scenario where we try hard to remember where we know these words from,
want to discover, and also find it interesting to see them quoted in different contexts. These situations remind
us of the importance of quotes in movies and music, that sometimes get more popular than the movie or song
they belong to. In fact, quotes, music and movies are among the contents that we most treasure, for their
emotional impact and the power to entertain and inspire us. In this paper, we present the motivation and the
interactive support for quotes in As Music Goes By, giving users a chance of searching and surfing quotes in
music and movies. Users can find, explore and compare related contents, and access quotes in a contextualized
way in the movies or song lyrics where they appear. The preliminary user evaluation results, focusing on
perceived usefulness, usability and user experience, were very encouraging, proving the concept, informing
refinements and new developments, already being addressed. Users valued most the search, navigation,
contextualization and emotional flavor: to be able to access and compare quotes in movies and in lyrics, to
navigate across movies and songs, the emotional dimension and representation also for quotes. Future work
will lead us further with the focus on rich, flexible and contextualized interactive access to quotes, music and
movies, aiming for increased understanding of their meaning and relations, chances for serendipitous
discoveries and to get inspired and moved by these media that we treasure.
1 INTRODUCTION
Quotes have been treasured and used since a long
time, and they come from different sources and
contexts. It is common that people identify
themselves with certain lyrics or quotes, inspiring or
reminding them of personal experiences. People
remember quotes and their origin when they induce
strong emotions (Flintlock, 2017; Jenkins, 2014).
Phrases that tend to become popular and quotes
(Danescu-Niculescu-Mizil et al., 2012) often use less
common words but common syntactic patterns, and
work in many different scenarios, making them
“portable” or quotable. The context in which a phrase
is proffered can greatly influence its degree of
memorability, making it relevant to provide users
with the opportunity to access quotes in their original
context, like in songs and movies.
People value music primarily because of the
emotions it evokes (Juslin and Vastfjall, 2008), and
music is often accompanied by lyrics that tell stories
with overt emotional messages. Lyrics play a relevant
role in conveying emotions in songs, tending to
emphasize the negative (like sad and angry) and to
detract from the more positive ones (like happy and
calm), although melodies are often more donimant
than lyrics in eliciting emotions (Ali and
Peynircioğlu, 2006). Chou et al. (2010) demonstrated
the relevance of song lyrics in music advertising,
finding that previously heard old songs have positive
effects by evoking good moods or favorable nostalgia
thoughts, adding to the idea that songs can be very
impactful, with the potencial of altering the behavior
of listeners (Dickens, 1998).
Movies are also very impactful (Oliveira et al.,
2013). In fact, music and movies have a significant
presence and impact in our lives and they have been
playing together since the early days of cinema, even
in silent movies (almost always accompanied by live
music on piano or small orchestras), allowing to
convey a shared meaning, strongly by their lyrics and
subtitles, often quoted and significant to many people.
Serra, V. and Chambel, T.
Quote Surfing in Music and Movies with an Emotional Flavor.
DOI: 10.5220/0009177300750085
In Proceedings of the 15th International Joint Conference on Computer Vision, Imaging and Computer Graphics Theory and Applications (VISIGRAPP 2020) - Volume 2: HUCAPP, pages
75-85
ISBN: 978-989-758-402-2; ISSN: 2184-4321
Copyright
c
2022 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
75
But this relation of music and movies has not been
much explored in media access.
In our previous work, MovieClouds (Chambel et
al., 2013) allowed to access, explore and watch
movies based on their content, mainly in audio and
subtitles, and with a focus on emotions expressed in
the subtitles, in the mood of the music, and felt by the
users. Subtitles were processed and sincronized with
movie watching, but for the songs, we focused on
mood based on the audio, not on lyrics. In As Music
Goes By (Moreira and Chambel, 2019), the aim is to
access and explore music in versions (or covers) and
movies where they appear along time, also with a
focus on emotional impact. Now, as described in this
paper, it is being enriched with support for quotes in
both music and movies, allowing to find, explore and
compare relevant related contents, and to access,
watch and listen to them in context, with the ability to
inform and inspire us. We hypothesized that this
support for quotes, their contextualized access in
movies and lyrics, and their emotional dimention are
relevant to have, and went on researching, designing
and testing.
The paper discusses the motivation, relevance and
means for accessing quotes in the context of music
and movies. It describes the background of related
and previous work in section 2, and presents the
support we are designing and developing for quotes
in As Music Goes By interactive web application in
section 3. A preliminary user evaluation is presented
next, followed by conclusions and future work.
2 BACKGROUND
Quotes have been treasured and used since a long
time. With the advent of the web, sites have appeared
to make them available, based on curators or user
contributions. Brainyquote (.com) e.g. rely on
curators to select quotations and collections to
inspire, motivate and entertain, with the aim to create
a rewarding experience to their users. Their quotes
have historical, political or cultural relevance, others
are for fun, coming from diverse contexts and often
by famous people. Goodreads(.com) is more
especialized in quotes from literature. Other more
specific quotes appear e.g. in the context of self-
development with the aim to inspire and help people
on their path, such as the case of louisehay(.com)
presenting Louise Hay’s affirmation (quote) of the
day and providing access to many more, presented in
different visual styles to help convey their mood. The
concept of quote of the day is also adopted in the
previous sites, and some have categories (e.g.
BrainQuote: love, art, nature, funny, and many other
topics; while LouiseHay is more focused on:
forgiveness, happiness, health, love, inspiration, etc.).
But most of these sites do not include many quotes
from movies or songs, and though in topics one may
find e.g. movies, then quotes are usually about, not
from, movies. Next approaches are more focused on
songs and movies, usually in separate.
Many quotes come from song lyrics. In the old
days listeners got lyrics from listening to songs, but it
became increasingly common to publish the lyrics in
records sleves or booklets, and several authors and
fans already publish songs in videos that present the
lyrics as the video plays. But to make them more
available and searcheable for a vast number of songs,
there are some lyrics-dedicated websites or platforms
since the early 2000s, and even Google displays lyrics
in searches for songs or lyrics, since 2014, using
Google Play. From the early days, e.g. AZLyrics
(.com) allows to browse by artist and to search by free
text, getting results organized by artist, album and
song; and a special section dedicated to soundtracks.
MetroLyrics (.com) has a similar purpose, but has
evolved to include more information like top songs,
videos and news about songs and artists, and allow
users to add meaning. In Songmeanings (.com), users
contribute with lyrics and discuss interpretations.
People tend to find meaning in lyrics and enjoy
knowing the authors’ and other people perspectives.
Genius (.com), possibly the world's biggest collection
of lyrics and musical knowledge, supports song
meaning from users and artists.
With a closer connection with the actual song,
Musixmatch (.com) supports lyrics translations,
having extensions to also synchronize lyrics with
music for Youtube, Spotify among others, aligned
with research that has been carried out in this area
(Wang et al., 2004). Whereas approaches like Shazam
(.com) process audio content to discover a song given
its audio, in situations where a song is playing and a
user wants to find out the name, the lyrics and the
artist, and more recently supporting TV programs and
adds. Besides this practical benefit of music
identification, Typke et al. (2005) already identified
that finding musical scores similar to a query could
help musicologists find out how composers influence
one another or how their works are related to earlier
works of their own or by other artists.
In a related perspective, relying on textual
analysis of lyrics, Logan et al. (2004) described a tool
to characterize songs semantics and determine artist
similarities, concluding that it was better than random
but inferior to acoustic similarity. LyricsRadar
(Sasaki et al., 2014) is a more recent lyric retrieval
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system that enables users to browse song lyrics by
analyzing their topics, taking into account the context
in which words are used (e.g. “tears” can be of
sadness or joy) to help users navigate to lyrics of
interest.
The support for quotes in IMDb, possibly the
most relevant platform about movies, reinforces their
relevance also in movies. It has a quote section for
each movie, in which users can find dialog scenes
highlighting quotes from the movie; and users can
also search quotes by text and get a list of movies and
quotes that contain the text. The longer the input, the
more precise the result. A similar search if provided
e.g. by QuoDB(.com) with a different database and
filters for movie title and genre. And there are sites
that organize most popular quotes by topic or in tops,
e.g. Top 100 quotes in the American Film Institute
(afi.com).
Song lyrics are a very rich resource and many
types of textual features can be extracted from them
(Hu et al., 2009; Jenkins, 2014), serving as motivation
to explore a new lyrics analysis and comparison
system, be it comparing musics with each other or
music with dialog from films, also relevant in our
approach. But none of the approaches above relate
movie quotes to lyrics. In our previous work we have
been addressing the crossroads of movies and music,
as highlighted in the introduction, and are now
extending it to address and support quotes in movies
and lyrics, reinforcing bridges among them.
3 QUOTES ACROSS LYRICS AND
MOVIES IN “AS MUSIC GOES
BY”
As Music Goes By is an interactive web application
that allows users to explore movies and music
individually, but more importantly, together (Moreira
and Chambel, 2019). This application allows users to
search, visualize and explore music and movies from
complementary perspectives that highlight the music
in their different versions, the artists, and the movie
soundtracks they belong to, along time. We are now
designing and developing the support for quotes in
both music and movies, allowing to find and explore
richer and more relevant related contents, and to
watch and listen to them in context. Users can search
for quotes and obtain details about them, be it to
remind them of a movie or song they know since a
long time ago, or something new that caught their
curiosity, and go on navigating, relating media
through similar quotes and experiencing them in the
context the music and movies they appear in. This can
help them really understand what these quotes mean,
and may surprise them with unexpected coincidences
and discoveries in serendipitous moments.
Relevant properties like time, music genre and
emotional impact are highlighted, as in the previous
version, and the previous features are still available,
now extended with the quotes. Next we present the
main features following the navigation illustrated in
the figures, and refer to main upgrades post-
preliminary evaluation reported in section 4.
3.1 Homepage and Random Quotes
In the Homepage (Fig.1a), the user is presented with
a carousel of images highlighting main features of the
application, and a random quote, identifying the
movie or song it is from. This allows to create
opportunities to find unexpected information through
quotes that may happen to be relevant to the user, in
serendipitous encounters (Chambel, 2011). A click on
the quote gets to the Quote View with more details
(Fig.1g), a click on the movie gets to the movie page
with more quotes on that movie (Fig.1e) and the
“change the quote” button picks another random
quote. This feature provides a discovery factor for
users that have no search in mind and just want to
explore the platform.
3.2 Quotes overView
Entering the Quotes View (on the top menu), users can
explore quotes in overviews, or search for quotes and
browse the results, analyzing and accessing them
individually or simultaneously - to compare quotes
from different songs and movies. Fig.1b presents a
chart overview representing how keen each music or
movie genres (selectable as an alternate view through
the title above) is to generate quotes. Post-evaluation:
we are also considering ordering bars by different
criteria (e.g. genre and amount) in line with the user
evaluation, and other representations (e.g. based on
circles). In a study, Condit-Schultz and Huron (2015)
found that different music genres have different levels
of lyric memorability and we would expect similar
results from movie genres.
Quote Surfing in Music and Movies with an Emotional Flavor
77
Figure 1: Movie Quotes and Song Lyrics in As Music Goes By - navigation example.
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3.3 Searching for a Quote
Searching for a quote can return the results in a list
(Fig.2, evaluated) or a timeline (Fig1.c, post-
evaluation), with different songs or movies in which
that searched text was found. The timeline is being
shown with thumbnails, but is to change the
representation when the number of results is high,
adopting circles like in the music versions in As
Music Goes By. In the results (and all the views
where quotes are displayed), users can click on the
quote to go to the Quote View.
Figure 2: As Music Goes By - Quote search results in list
format.
3.4 Quote View and Emotions
In this view (Fig1.g), the quote text is presented along
with its source (movie or song) title, and a date. There
are different alternate views, chosen like in a
carrossel, that can help convey the message and the
emotional mood in different ways. The one
exemplified and evaluated has as backgroud the
cover/poster image representing the movie, and
circles colored in accordance with the dominat
emotions, as we describe next. Other alternatives
would include: the image being a frame from the
movie scene where the quote appears; an image
associated with the mood of the quote; no image; or
no emotional information.
As Music Goes By supports the emotional
dimension in songs, based on Valence (polarity, in the
horizontal axis) and Energy (intensity, in the vertical
axis) values provided by Spotify (SpotifyFtrs-ref), in
accordance with the bidimentional model of emotions
by Russel (1980). In this model, emotions can be
represented in a 2D continuous circumplex, where
discrete categorical emotions can be represented as a
reference, in a wheel of emotions (like the one in
Fig.1h). In As Music Goes By, we are adopting 12
emotions as a reference, 3 per quadrant.
For the quotes, we are adopting a set of 6
emotions, the ones supported by the current
emotional text processing approach we are using for
quotes and lyrics (ParDots-ref; Singh, 2017):
Happiness, Sadness, Anger, Fear, Excitement, and
Boredom. The first 4 also belong to Ekman’s 6 basic
emotions (Ekman, 1992) (the others being: disgust
and surprise, for some authors not as basic as the other
4), and the other 2 (excitement and boredom) add
emotions with high and low energy (arousal) to the
set. All these emotions exist in Plutchick’s (80)
model, where they inherited the color map for their
representation in As Music Goes By (Fig.1d,g,h):
Happyness-Yellow, Sadness-Blue, Anger-Red, Fear-
Green, Excitement-GoldenYellow, and Boredom-
Light Purple.
For the Quote View (Fig1.g), the emotions
associated to the quote are found (ParDots-ref; Singh,
2017) (more details in section 3.9), with a percentage
associated with each one of the 6 emotions in the
model. These are represented beneath by small
colored circles, using the adopted colormap, and the
circle dimention reflecting its percentage in the quote.
In the example, the highest percentage is for anger
(44%) in red, followed by fear in green. The name and
percentage of the emotions are presented on over.
Highlighted above, in a larger size and as a
background to the quote, there are two colored
circles: the largest one represents the global emotion
in a color that is calculated as a weighted average of
the 6 basic colors in their corresponding (brownish in
the example, Fig1.g); whereas the smaller circle
represents the dominant emotion, in its original
color, and an area that represents its percentage (in
this case: anger in red, 44% of the larger circle’s area).
This way, the highlight goes to the overall and to the
most dominant emotion, with the opportunity to know
in detail the % of all the emotions. Post-evaluation:
labels were added to the larger circles to make their
meaning and values visible without user action.
3.5 Movie and Song Views
The image or title (of the movie or song) in the Quote
View will lead to the Movie or Song View (Fig.1g-e).
But these can also be accessed after searching for
movies (or anywhere a movie appears in the
application), like in task 4 in the evaluation, leading
to (Fig.1f). Exemplified Movie Views (Godfather in
Fig.1e, You’ve Got Mail in Fig.1f) have Quotes Tab
open to access the quote in the context of the movie
scene (song lyrics in Song Views) where it appears.
Clicking on a quote navigates to Quote View (Fig.1e-
g). Quotes include the timestamp; and to increase the
Quote Surfing in Music and Movies with an Emotional Flavor
79
contextualization, in post-evaluation: also the
character that proffered the quote, and will be used as
an index to the video (when a quote is clicked, the
movie plays from the time when the quote appears).
Quotes will be synchronized with the movie when it
is playing, becoming highlighted when their time
comes (in the list and the timeline). Other tabs (above
the video) can be accessed for other views (e.g. Songs
in Movie is a view of the movie soundtrack (Moreira
and Chambel, 2019)).
3.6 Comparing Movie Quotes or Song
Lyrics in Context
From the results view (Fig2, Fig1.c-d), the user can
also select two results and compare them, by
exploring the dialogs in which the similar quotes
appear – Godfather and You’ve Got Mail movies in
the example, for the searched quote “Go to the
matresses” (comparing lyrics of 2 songs is similar).
Post-evaluation: to ease the comparison, the quotes
with the searched text are highlighted in the context
of the dialogues where they appear, contributing to
the comprehension of their meaning.
Beneath each dialogue, users find the emotional
information for the corresponding quote,
highlighting the colored circle of the dominant
emotion and, as in the Quote View (Fig.1g), the
other circles beneath representing all the emotions,
with their size proportional to their percentages.
More information can be found on over, reveling the
name and % of each emotion. In this example, a
situation where an expression in a movie dialogue
(from the The Godfather) is quoted in another movie
(You’ve Got Mail) it could be expected that the
dominant emotions would be quite similar, but the
results reveal some differences. In fact, only part of
the sentence is the same: “go to the mattresses”. The
quote is proferred in a more aggressive context in
Godfather: “I want Solozzo. If not, it’s all out war,
we go to the mattresses”, leading to a dominance of
anger (second dominant: fear); whereas in You’ve
Got Mail: “I’ve decided to go to the mattresses” was
classified with a dominance of fear (second
dominant: sadness), making sence in their context.
3.7 Comparing Movie Quotes with
Song Lyrics in Context
In the Quote View, users could compare the quote
with a related song (Fig.3). The lyrics are showed on
the right as a close up in the Fig, but appear bellow
the quote on the screen. In the evaluation (task 4) this
feature was considered less useful, satisfactory and
easy to use than the ones where the compaisons where
made in the context of both movies (task 6.2) or songs
(task 7). So, post-evaluation: these comparisons
(illustrated in Fig.1f-h), are done in the context of
both movie and song (Fig.1h). Here the quote “Its
clouds illusions I recall” in the dialogue from You’ve
Got Mail movie is compared with the lyrics of Joni
Mitchell’s song “Both Sides Now” that includes this
quote, common text highlighted in bold. S in the other
comparisons, the user will also be able to view, and
cycle through other results featuring the searched
quote or part of it (exemplified by “Change
comparison 1/3 >” beneath the song).
Figure 3: Comparing movie quote with song lyrics.
The emotional information of the quotes is
presented beneath the movie dialog and the song
lyrics by colored circles, as in the previous
comparison views. In this example (Fig1.h), the
dominant emotion is the same in the movie quote and
the song lyrics: sadness, with similar percentages
(36% and 38%). In the movie, the 2nd dominant is
fear and the 3rd is anger, while the 2nd and 3rd
dominant emotions in the song are the same but in the
oposite order.
In addition, and following the appreciation users
showed for the emotional dimension, post-evaluation:
this view illustrates the comparison of the emotions
associated with movie quote, song lyrics, and the
music itself, in the emotional wheel (in the middle,
and can be made visible or hidden in these
comparison views) where the 6 basic emotions were
represented as reference around the wheel. For the
movie quote and song lyrics, the position and the
color of the circle is the weigthed average of the
position and color of the basic emotions in the wheel;
for the music, the position is defined directly by the
valence and energy values from Spotify, and the color
is calculated by interpolation taking into account the
relative position to the basic colored emotions in the
wheel. In addition to a color, the circles have an icon
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identifying their content type (quotation mark (”) for
movie quotes, L for lyrics and a musical note for
music). In the example, the 3 have a negative valence,
aligned with the dominance of sadness, but the music
itself was considered a bit less energetic than the
movie quote and the song lyrics, in a more nostalgic
mood than what is conveyed by the text alone, which
we could recognize and perceive when listening to the
music.
3.8 More Quotes
In addition to the quotes shown (based on
MovieQuotes (MQuotes-ref)) there might be other
ones that are relevant and found in the subtitles. For
example, in the movie You’ve Got Mail, “Go to the
matresses” is shown twice in the dialog between
Kathleen and Frank, but other occorrences of same
quote exist in the dialog she previously had with Joe,
that were not identified, and not all (other) quotes
from Godfather were identified. Also Kathleen is a
fan of Joni Mitchell and other quotes exist to another
of her songs, but only this one is registered as a quote.
Multiple occurences of a quote could be detected
on the subtitles, providing a better contextualization
and additional connections to explore. For different
movie quotes, for now we are relying on external
sources and not considering that any text in the
subtitles can be seen as a quote. Though the full lyrics
text is being considered for songs (acceptable since
they are more focused and small in each song, than
subtitles are in movies). This way, through the quotes
found, we can discover relations with movies, and
processing their subtitles, we can find and explore
richer characterizations and relations in movies.
3.9 Behind the Curtain
As Music Goes By has a three tier architecture based
on the MEAN stack, using Angular-JS and D3 in the
Presentation Layer, and external REST APIs to
collect data. In the first phase, APIs from: Spotify for
music and artists; SecondHandSongs for original and
cover versions; YouTube links for the videos; and
WhatSong for song information in movies.
In this new phase, adding movie quotes and lyrics,
with an emotional perspective, other services were
explored. For song lyrics, Genius (Gen-ref) was
studied, for its focus on informationa about music and
their lyrics, but not readily accessible through their
API. Instead we adopted musiXmatch (MxMatch-ref)
with aprox. 13 million songs. For movie quotes,
MovieQuotes API (MQuotes-ref) was used, having
quotes for more than 500 movies, adequate for our
proof of concept, although limited if to build a full
service in the future
To detect emotions in quotes and lyrics we are
using ParallelDots Emotion API (version 4)
(ParDots-ref; Singh, 2017). It uses convolutional
neural networks, adequate for feature detection
trained with datasets catalogued with emotional
terms, and adopts deep learning techniques that have
been adequate for this type of classifiers. We are also
following up on our previous content processing
research (Chambel et al. 2013), mainly for subtitles
and audio, to complement these approaches and
address other type of characteristics and content.
4 PRELIMINARY USER
EVALUATION
A preliminary user evaluation was conducted to
assess how users would perceive the Quote features
in As Music Goes By in terms of usefulness,
satisfaction and ease of use, how they would use
them, and their opinions about the interface and the
functionalities. The results of this evaluation are
already being considered to refine and evolve the
application, as commented in section 3 and 4.3.
4.1 Methodology
After explaining the evaluation purpose and
procedure, asking some demographic questions and
breifly introducing the application to the subjects,
they performed a set of pre-defined tasks with the
different features. In this task-oriented evaluation, we
observed users performing the tasks, and for each
one, we annotated success, speed of completion,
errors, hesitations, comments and suggestions.
Usefulness, Satisfaction and Ease of use of each
feature was evaluated after each task based on USE
(Lund, 2001), in a questionnaire.
Table 1: Tasks in the User Evaluation.
T1: Read the “random” quote on the homepage (Fig.1a-g).
T2.1: Which dominant emotion in its quote view? (Fig.1g)
T2.2: Which is its less dominat emotion? what %? (Fig.1g)
T3: Access this quote in its movie view. (Fig.1g-e) In what
time does it appear? (at eval: only in the quotes, no timeline)
T4: Access You’ve Got Mail movie, then quote “I could
never…”, compare it with related song lyrics. (Fig.1f -Fig.3)
T5: In quotes (over)view, how many quotes in comedy movies?
and in hip-hop songs? (Fig.2b)
T6: Search for quotes with a string, check results in list. (Fig.2)
T7.1: Select 2 movies, compare their quotes. (Fig.1c-d)
T7.2: Which dominant quote emotion, and movie genre? (Fig.1d)
T8: Search for quotes (like in T6), compare 2 songs’ lyrics.
Quote Surfing in Music and Movies with an Emotional Flavor
81
After the tasks, the users provided a global
appreciation of the application, also through a USE
rating, and were asked to refer to the features that they
liked the most, and leave suggestions about things
they would like to see improved or included in the
future. They were also to characterize the application
with most relevant perceived ergonomic, hedonic and
appeal quality aspects (Hassenzahl et al., 2000),
selecting pre-defined terms.
4.2 Participants
Ten subjects participated in the user evaluation: 8
male, 2 female, 23-55 years old (Mean 31.1, Std.Dev
12.1); 2 with highschool, 6 BSc, 2 MSc degrees; from
diverse backgrounds, such as marketing, informatics,
management, international relations, entrepreneur-
ship, and video production; all having their first
contact with this application, allowing to percieve
most usability issues and a tendency in user
satisfaction. About their habits and motivations in this
context: all users listen to music on a daily basis (all
use Spotify, 4 Youtube, 1 Apple Music, 1
SoundCloud, 1 CD); 2 watch movies daily, 6 weekly,
2 2-3 times/month (9 use Netflix, 2HBO, 1 Youtube,
Prime video, TV, or cinema); 5 search for information
about music and movies 2-3 times/month, 3 daily, 2
weekly; (for movies: 8 use IMDB, 1 Rotten Tomatos,
Netflix, Instagram, TV box); (for music: 10 Google,
4 Spotify, 3 Genius). Regarding movie quotes and
song lyrics: 3 consider very interesting, 3 interesting,
3 medium interest, 1 not very interesting; Main
motivations: to know the lyrics of a song that is
playing; and to discuss about movies and be able to
remember and use main quotes; To access
information about quotes: 5 use IMDb; 2 Google; To
access song lyrics: 8 use Google, 3 Genius, and 2
AZLyrics.
4.3 Results
All users completed the tasks successfully, quite fast,
without many hesitations, and reported having
enjoyed using the application, although having their
preferences for different features. The results are
presented in the next tables and figure, and briefly
commented in the text along with the suggestions
made by the users.
Table 2: USE evaluation of Quotes in As Music Goes By
Likert Scale:0-4: X=Useful(U); Satisfactory(S); Easy to
use(E); 0:Not X; 1:Not much X; 2:Medium(*); 3:X; 4:Very X
(*) Useful without Medium (2); M=Mean; SD=Std. Deviation.
Task U S E
T# Feature
M SD M SD M SD
1. Home: Random quotes 3.1 0.3 3.0 0.7 3.3 0.7
2.1 Quote View: dom. emotion 2.8 1.0 2.9 0.6 2.4 0.7
2.2 less dominant emotion 2.7 0.9 2.9 0.6 3.0 0.9
3. Movie View: quote & time 3.0 0.8 3.0 0.7 2.9 0.6
4. Compare m.quote & lyrics 2.7 0.9 3.0 0.5 2.7 0.9
5. Quotes overView 3.0 0.8 3.1 0.6 3.1 0.6
6. Quote Search 3.2 0.9 3.2 0.6 3.6 0.5
7.1 Compare 2 movies’ quotes 3.0 1.2 3.0 0.5 3.3 0.7
7.2 dominant emotion & genre 3.3 0.9 3.1 0.7 3.5 0.5
8. Compare 2 songs lyrics 2.9 1.4 2.9 0.6 3.0 0.7
Global Evaluation
2.9 0.7 3.1 0.6 3.0 0.5
Total per Task (mean) 3.0 0.9 3.0 0.6 3.1 0.7
Overall, participants were satisfied with their user
experience in the application, also finding it useful
and easy to use. The global USE classification
assigned to the application (U:2.9; S:3.1; E:3.0) at the
end is very similar, with a slight fluctuation favoring
satisfaction over usefulness and ease of use, when
compared with the average of the scores along the
individual tasks (U:3.0; S: 3.0; E: 3.1). Table 2 and
Fig.4 summarize these results.
Figure 4: USE evaluation of Quotes in As Music Goes By in
stacked bar charts. Likert Scale: (0-4), same as in Table 2.
Worth noticing that the first time the users interpreted
the emotions, in the quote view (T2.1), they did not
find it as easy as other tasks (E:2.4). But this was one
of their favorite features, and the next views with
emotions were found easier. In any case, one of the
reasons for their perception was the need to hover to
find the meaning, inspiring adjustments in the
labeling, as reported in section 3.4. In a similar way,
the first quote comparison (T4) was not found as easy
as the next ones, and quote comparison is also in the
top list of favorite features. Also notice that we had a
slight difference in the Usefulness scale: there was no
middle value (2: medium), to enforce a more explicit
positive or negative opinion. As a result, the lowest
scores for U went a bit lower than the lowest for S and
E, but on average not so noticeable (those that would
have chosen medium (2) may have split almost even
between 1 and 3). Most of the lowest scores were
HUCAPP 2020 - 4th International Conference on Human Computer Interaction Theory and Applications
82
assigned by one of the participants who is not very
fond of this type of application, and does not usually
access media online, preferring to watch movies on
TV and cinema. Would be considered outside of our
target audience.
As for the most favorite features and
functionalities, and aligned with their previous
scores, most users chose: to search and compare
quotes in movies and in lyrics; to navigate across
movies and songs; having emotions in quotes; the
color mix based on the emotions in a quote (i.e. the
global emotion, with a weighted average of the
indivitual emotions’ colors); and to access all the
quotes in the context of a movie. Some users also
highlighted the flexibility in the search, with few or
several words for more general or more specific
queries. These results are aligned with the high scores
for the search and comparisons tasks, but highlight the
preference for the global emotion in a feature with
scores that did not stand out (T2.1 and T2.2). Users
favor the dominant and global emotions, the ones we
highlight in the application, over the less dominant, but
like to know them all in detail, when exploring. So our
options aligned with their preferences.
As suggestions, some participants mentioned
highlighting more relevant content (which we are
already addressing in the contextualization of quote
comparison, as reported in 3.6 and 3.7), and some
minor adjustments (we are also addressing) like the
position of a couple buttons to avoid scroll, increasing
font size where too small, and make more evident
what is clickable; and one suggested to have an alarm
clock playing songs or movie scenes that the users
had been interested about, when waking them up.
As a final classification, users summarized their
appreciation of the application choosing most
relevant perceived hedonic (7 positive | 7 negative
(opposite)), ergonomic (8+|8-) and appeal (8+|8-)
quality aspects in (Hassenzahl et al., 2000).
Table 3: Quality terms users chose for As Music Goes By.
H:Hedonic; E: Ergonomic; A: Appeal; Clear (+) vs
Confusing (-); Predictable (+) vs Unpredictable (-).
Terms type # Terms type #
Simple
E 7 Good A 3
Interesting
H 6 Sympathetic A 3
Comprehensible
E
6 Impressive H 2
Pleasant
A 6 Inviting A 2
Original H 4 Controlable E 1
Aesthetic A 4 Familiar E 1
Innovative H 3 Desirable A 1
Trustworthy E 3 Motivating A 1
Clear E 3 Confusing E 1
Attractive A 3 Unpredictble E 1
Simple was the most chosen term. Interesting,
Comprehensible and Pleasant were also chosen by
more than of the subjects. Only two negative terms
were chosen: Confusing and Unpredictable, only
once. But users chose more often terms that are the
opposite (Clear: 3 users), or in a way balance these
out: Comprehensive (5 users) and Original (4 users)
and innovative (3 users), originality and innovation
tend to bring about some unpredictability. Users
made a reasonable balanced choice of terms in the 3
categories, with more emphasis in Ergonomic and
Appeal (H: 4+ terms (in 7+), chosen 15 times; E: 6+
(in 8+) 21 times, 2- (in 8-) 2 times; A: the 8+ terms,
23 times), confirming and complementing the
feedback they had provided along the evaluation.
5 CONCLUSIONS AND
PERSPECTIVES
This paper presented the inclusion of quotes in As
Music Goes By, for both music lyrics and movies,
allowing to find, explore and compare related
contents, and access quotes in a contextualized way
in the movies or songs where they appear,
highlighting their emotional dimension, aiming to
contribute to an increased awareness and
understanding of their meaning and impact. It allows
to access quotes that we search for, or to discover
them accidentally, increasing chances for significant
and unexpected serendipitous discoveries (Chambel,
2011), to experience in a more conscious way the
movies and songs that touch us the most.
The preliminary evaluation proved the concept to
be valued and appreciated. Users found the
application and the features useful, satisfying and
easy to use, and enjoyed in particular the flexible
search, the contextualized access and comparison of
quotes in movies and in lyrics, to navigate across
movies and songs, and the emotions, aligned with
what we have hypothesized. Simple, Interesting,
Comprehensible and Pleasant were the most
perceived qualities, followed by Original and
Aesthetic. Overall, the results were encouraging, and
are informing our new developments.
For the future, we plan to refine further,
reevaluate and extend the interactive features.
Directions include: to create more visualizations with
integrated overviews, beyond relation of genres with
amount of quotes; and enrich relations, especially
between movies and songs with similar phrases, same
actors, or similar emotional impact.
Quote Surfing in Music and Movies with an Emotional Flavor
83
New developments in content processing (e.g.
subtitles, lyrics, quotes, and audio) and emotional
impact (automatic or based on self assessment) could
also enrich and automatize further finding relations
that contribute to an increased comprehension of
these contents. In section 3 we already exemplified
some directions mainly with subtitles (for enriched
and multiple quotes) and emotions. One of our goals
is also to reach a unified model for the emotions that
are relevant in the context of music and movies. In
this proof of concept, we are using two sources of
classification for quotes and music (Parallel Dots and
Spotify) with different models. The representation of
the emotions in the same circumpex, based on arousal
and valence (Fig.2h) is already going in the direction
of a coherent unified model and representation, and
aligned with our research in content and user emotion
detection (Chambel et al., 2013; Oliveira et al., 2013;
Bernardino et al., 2016).
Different modalities and contexts of use could
also be taken into account to access information in a
richer and more flexible way, possibly mediated by
conversational and intelligent agents. For example,
identifying a music that is playing, or what a character
is saying in the movie being watched, to direct the
users to the corresponding information, to other
content related to this one and the situation that they
are living in the moment.
Regarding quotes, and as a complement to the
automatic detection of the underlying emotions, users
could identify in their perspectives the emotions they
associate to them (what they feel and makes them
memorable and valuable), and quotes (from movies
and songs) could be suggested or collected in
personal journals as inspirational sources, aligned
with the more recent developments in (Chambel and
Carvalho, 2020). Designs for quotes in the Quote
View (Fig1.g) and in users’ personal journals could
be automatically created based on colors of the movie
scenes and emotions conveyed, in a similar approach
to (Kim and Suk, 2016), or in styles created or
selected by the users for inspiration and self
expression contexts (Nave et al., 2016).
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This work was partially supported by FCT through
funding of the AWESOME project, ref. PTDC/CCI/
29234/2017, and LASIGE Research Unit, ref. UIDB
/00408/2020.
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