Listeners with high parasympathetic tone exhibited greater vagal responses to music, while those with elevated sympathetic drive showed amplified sympathetic activation.
Does baseline autonomic balance determine physiological and cardiovascular responses to expressive music events in adult listeners?
112 participants (63 females, age 21-79 years), including 25 with elevated resting blood pressure.
Listening to nine expressive versions of eight pieces of Western classical music.
Physiologic change points (cardiovascular/autonomic responses) linked to music features, analyzed via canonical correlation analysis.surrogate
Baseline autonomic activity determines whether expressive music elicits parasympathetic engagement or sympathetic activation, providing a framework for precision music therapeutics in cardiovascular prevention and rehabilitation.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
Abstract Aims Personalising music-based interventions requires understanding of how individuals’ physiology responds to expressive music events. Although music can modulate autonomic function, variability across listeners has limited its therapeutic use. We introduce a change-point-driven framework that links music features to cardiovascular responses and test whether baseline autonomic balance is associated with group- and individual-level response patterns. Methods and results Physiological signals from 112 participants (63 females, 21-79 years, including 25 with elevated resting blood pressure) collected whilst they listened to nine expressive versions of eight pieces of Western classical music were analysed using canonical correlation analysis. Listeners were stratified by their baseline sympathetic–parasympathetic balance. The first two canonical variates identified the dominant links between music and physiologic change points. We developed a new method for visually representing these couplings, termed change point connectivity graphs. Listeners with high parasympathetic tone showed greater vagal engagement in response to novel melodies and increased acoustic intensity, whereas those with elevated sympathetic drive exhibited amplified sympathetic responses. Novelty was the most consistent musical driver of autonomic change. Conclusion These findings demonstrate that baseline autonomic activity might determine whether expressive music changes elicit parasympathetic engagement or sympathetic activation. The change point connectivity graphs open new pathways to selecting or controlling expressive music structures to support the achieving of targeted physiologic effects. Our framework is a step toward precision music therapeutics by enabling the selection or modulation of music features to produce autonomic effects for cardiovascular prevention, rehabilitation, and practice, including applications via wearable technologies.
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Soliński et al. (Mon,) reported a other. Listeners with high parasympathetic tone exhibited greater vagal responses to music, while those with elevated sympathetic drive showed amplified sympathetic activation.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6971bd6a642b1836717e223a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/ehjimp/qyag013
Mateusz Soliński
Electrophysiology
Victoria Pope
King's College London
Pier Lambiase
St Bartholomew's Hospital
European Heart Journal - Imaging Methods and Practice
King's College London
St Bartholomew's Hospital
London Institute for Mathematical Sciences
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