CASE REPORT ON THE SUBJECTIVE EXPERIENCE OF YOUNG ADULT WOMEN LISTENING TO MUSIC WITH A QUANTITATIVE ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY STUDY

Authors

  • A Addawiyah Faculty of Medicine, Muhammadiyah Surakarta University, Indonesia
  • S Syahida Faculty of Medicine, Muhammadiyah Surakarta University, Indonesia
  • L Mahardika Faculty of Medicine, Muhammadiyah Surakarta University, Indonesia
  • Y Romadhon Department of Family Medicine and Public Health, Muhammadiyah Surakarta University, Indonesia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17501/3021677X.2023.1126

Keywords:

cognitive activity, electrode, music, electroencephalography

Abstract

Introduction: many studies have proven the positive effect of listening to music on health. So far there is still limited research evaluating how the brain plays a role in supporting cognitive activity listening to music and how it affects health. One method that can evaluate brain activity in listening to music and its effects on health is by measuring electroencephalography quantitatively associated with changes in heart rate. Objective: to subjectively measure mental activity in listening to music through quantitative EEG examination by looking at the size of event related de/re-synchronization (ERD) alpha wave power and its correlation to heart rate variations in real time, in young adult women. Methods: measuring the ERD power of the alpha of the 20 EEG electrodes with variations in heart rate when the subject listens to music. Results: when listening to music there is a decrease in left prefrontal cortex activity (F3 and F7). In general, there is a lateralized pattern of increasing right hemispheric alpha power, and there is a very dominant increase in the right auricular (A2), right temporal (T6) and right occipital (O2) areas. There is no difference in heart rate frequency during basal conditions with listening to music. Conclusion: the subjective experience of listening to music is followed by lateralization of the right hemisphere with a very dominant increase in the auricular, temporal and occipital areas.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Rebecchini L. (2021, October 2018). Music, mental health, and immunity. Brain, Behav Immun – Heal. Retrieved from: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbih.2021.100374

Hou J. (2022). Effective Ways for College Students ’ Mental Health Education. J Healthc Eng. Retrieved from: https://doi.org/10.1155/2022/3031064%0AResearch

Dong X, Kang X, Ding X.(2022). Influence and Analysis of Music Teaching Environment Monitoring on Students ’ Mental Health Using Data Mining Technology. J Environ Public Health.

Mao N.(2022). The Role of Music Therapy in the Emotional Regulation and Psychological Stress Relief of Employees in the Workplace. Retrieved from: https://doi.org/10.1155/2022/4260904%0AResearch

Li D. (2022). Music Therapy in Mental Health and Emotional Diversion of Primary and Secondary School Students. Occup Ther Int Int [Internet]. Retrieved from: https://doi.org/10.1155/2022/8370682%0AResearch

McCaffrey T, Edwards J, Fannon D. (2011) Is there a role for music therapy in the recovery approach in mental health? CORE View metadata, citation and similar papers at core. Arts Psychother. 2011;38:185–9.

Lee S, Allison T, O’neill D, Punch P, Helitzer E, Moss H. (2022). Integrative review of singing and music interventions for family carers of people living with dementia.

Zhang L, Yu W. (2022¸13 Maret). Effect of Group Impromptu Music Therapy on Emotional Regulation and Depressive Symptoms of College Students : A Randomized Controlled Study. Front Psychol.

Ning H. (2023, 14 Maret).Analysis of the value of folk music intangible cultural heritage on the regulation of mental health. Front Psychiatry. 2023;14(March):1–11.

Jacoby N, Polak R, Grahn JA, Cameron DJ, Lee KM, Godoy R, et al. (2021) Universality and cross-cultural variation in mental representations of music revealed by global comparison of rhythm priors.

Hyväri T. (2023). The shivering pianist Treatment strategies for music performance anxiety. Luleå University of Technology.

Taruffi L, Küssner MB.(2019). A review of music-evoked visual mental imagery: Conceptual issues, relation to emotion, and functional outcome. Psychomusicology Music Mind, Brain. 2019;29(2–3):62–74.

Deil J, Markert N, Normand P, Kammen P, Küssner MB, Taruffi L. (2022). Mind-wandering during contemporary live music : An exploratory study. Music Sci. 2022;1–21.

Brattico E, Brigitte Bogert, Jacobsen T.(2013). Toward a neural chronometry for the aesthetic experience of music. Front Psychol. 2013;4(MAY):1–21.

Habibi A, Damasio A. (2014). Music, feelings, and the human brain. Psychomusicology Music Mind, Brain. 2014;24(1):92–102.

Radler DR, Touger-Decker RA. (2022). Music and health in times of the COVID-19 pandemic Klaus. J Dis Prev Heal Promot. 2022;6:1–3.

Stapleton P, Dispenza J, McGill S, Sabot D, Peach M, Raynor D. (2022). Large effects of brief meditation intervention on EEG spectra in meditation novices. IBRO Reports [Internet]. 2020;9(October):290–301. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ibror.2020.10.006

Romadhon YA.(2018). Model pengukuran kekhusyukan sholat dengan pemeriksaan elektrofisiologi kuantitatif. In: The 8 th University Research Colloquium. Universitas Muhammadiyah Purwokerto; 2018. p. 1–10.

Kučikienė D, Praninskienė R. (2018). The impact of music on the bioelectrical oscillations of the brain. Acta medica Litu. 2018;25(2):101–6.

Haegens S, Händel BF, Jensen O. (2011).Top-down controlled alpha band activity in somatosensory areas determines behavioral performance in a discrimination task. J Neurosci. 2011;31(14):5197–204.

Altenmüller E, Schürmann K, Lim VK, Parlitz D. (2002). Hits to the left, flops to the right: Different emotions during listening to music are reflected in cortical lateralisation patterns. Neuropsychologia. 2002;40(13):2242–56.

Correa JP. (2023). Cross-Modal Musical Expectancy in Complex Sound Music : A Grounded Theory. J Cogn. 2023;6(33):1–20.

Janata P. (2009). The neural architecture of music-evoked autobiographical memories. Cereb Cortex. 2009;19(11):2579–94.

Rampp S, Spindler K, Hartwigsen G, Scheller C, Simmermacher S, Scheer M, et al. (2022). Archery under the (electroencephalography-)hood: Theta-lateralization as a marker for motor learning. Neuroscience. 2022;499:23–39. Retrieved from: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2022.07.019

Kumari R, Gibson H, Jarjees M, Turner C, Purcell M, Vučković A. (2023). The predictive value of cortical activity during motor imagery for subacute spinal cord injury-induced neuropathic pain. Clin Neurophysiol. 2023;148:32–43.

de Vareilles H, Rivière D, Mangin JF, Dubois J. (2023). Development of cortical folds in the human brain: An attempt to review biological hypotheses, early neuroimaging investigations and functional correlates. Dev Cogn Neurosci.

Jin X, Zhang L, Wu G, Wang X, Du Y. (2023). Compensation or preservation ? Different roles of functional lateralization in speech perception in older non-musicians and musicians. bioRxiv. 2023;04.

Iballa B, Vinoo A, Petri T, Elvira B. (2012) Dynamics of Brain Activity Underlying Working Memory for Music in a Naturalistic Condition. UNIVERSITY OF JYVÄSKYLÄ; 2012.

Downloads

Published

2024-02-28

How to Cite

Addawiyah , A., Syahida , S., Mahardika , L., & Romadhon , Y. (2024). CASE REPORT ON THE SUBJECTIVE EXPERIENCE OF YOUNG ADULT WOMEN LISTENING TO MUSIC WITH A QUANTITATIVE ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY STUDY. Proceedings of the International Conference of Community Health and Medical Sciences, 1(1), 220–226. https://doi.org/10.17501/3021677X.2023.1126