The philosopher Jenefer Robinson[5] assumes the existence of a mutual dependence between cognition and elicitation in her description of ‘emotions as process, music as process’ theory (or ‘process’ theory). Robinson argues that the process of emotional elicitation begins with an ‘automatic, immediate response that initiates motor and autonomic activity and prepares us for possible action’ causing a process of cognition that may enable listeners to ‘name’ the felt emotion. This series of events continually exchanges with new, incoming information. Robinson argues that emotions may transform into one another, causing blends, conflicts, and ambiguities that make impede describing with one word the emotional state that one experiences at any given moment; instead, inner feelings are better thought of as the products of multiple emotional ‘streams’. Robinson argues that music is a series of simultaneous processes, and that it therefore is an ideal medium for mirroring such more ‘cognitive’ aspects of emotion as musical themes' ‘desiring’ resolution or leitmotif's mirrors memory processes. These simultaneous musical processes can reinforce or conflict with each other and thus also express the way one emotion ‘morphs into another over time’.