- The Influence of Music on Mental Health Through Neuroplasticity . . . - MDPI
Music is a near-universal anthropological and sensory phenomenon that engages distributed brain networks and peripheral physiological systems to shape emotion, cognition, sociality, and bodily regulation
- The Transformative Power of Music in Mental Well-Being
Whether we passively listen to our favorite songs or actively engage in music-making by singing or playing instruments, music can have a profound influence on our socio-emotional development and overall well-being
- role of music in promoting health and wellbeing: a systematic review . . .
Given that music, both listened and actively performed, promotes and maintains good health and wellbeing among the population, we sought to perform a systematic review that would assess its biopsychosocial effects on a population over 40 years of age
- How Do Music Activities Affect Health and Well-Being? A . . . - Frontiers
This scoping review of 63 studies revealed that all eight categories of music activities demonstrated some benefits to health or well-being, although it is difficult to make generalized statements due to the diversity of study designs and measures across studies
- The Music and Mental Health Project: uniting primary health care . . .
There is an urgent need to consider the way forward for music and mental health studies, strategies, and practices that help us raise the quality of our lives, at the level of personal, social, spiritual, and community development
- Music, Mental Health, and Mood Regulation: A Data-Driven Approach to . . .
Overall, this study provides valuable insights into how music preferences, mental health conditions, and listening behaviors interact, ofering evidence-based recommendations for integrating music therapy into mental health treatments
- Associations between Music Listening Habits and Mental Health A Cross . . .
This study examines the associations between music listening habits and mental health conditions, including anxiety, depression, insomnia, and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), using a survey-based, cross-sectional design
- The Role of Embodied Simulation and Visual Imagery in Emotional . . .
Two behavioral studies investigated whether, and to what extent, mimicry is responsible for emotion contagion, and second, to what extent context for affective responses in the form of visual imagery moderates emotional responses
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