Affective and autonomic response to dynamic rhythmic entrainment – Mechanisms of a specific music therapy factor

The objective of this study was to examine specific cardiovascular and affective effects of live music that was initially matched with the listener’s heart beat and then gradually decreased to promote relaxation. Thirty apparently healthy students were randomized to either the experimental (EG) or the control group (CG). After a brief mental stress task, both groups listened to a live music therapy relaxation technique. While a biofeedback device was utilized to enable real-time synchronization of relaxing music to the listener’s pulse in the EG, the tempo in the CG was fixed to 70 beats per minute. Outcomes encompassed self-ratings of stress and well-being, as well as autonomic measures of cardiovascular reactivity. The entrained-tempo condition led to a significantly stronger increase in peripheral blood flow (p <  .01) and subjective well-being (p =  .036). No between-group differences were observed for changes in pulse rate and self-rated stress level (both p >  .05). We conclude that rhythmic entrainment may promote a psychophysiological relaxation response. It could be argued that the decrease in sympathetic arousal led to more favorable affective self-ratings via an interoceptive feedback process, but more research is needed to clarify the direction of effects.
Source: Arts in Psychotherapy - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research