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Everyday music listening: The importance of individual and situational factors for musical emotions and stress reduction

TLDR
Helsing et al. as mentioned in this paper explored the effects of everyday music listening on emotions, stress and health by using the Day Reconstruction Method (DRM) to study the prevalence of musical emotions in everyday life.
Abstract
Helsing, M. (2012). Everyday music listening: The importance of individual and situational factors for musical emotions and stress reduction. Department of Psychology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden. Music listening primarily evokes positive emotions in listeners. Research has shown that positive emotions may be fundamental for improving both psychological and physical aspects of well-being. Besides from the music itself it is essential to consider individual and situational factors when studying emotional experiences to music. Everyone does not respond in the same way to a piece of music and one individual may respond differently to a piece of music at different times. The main aim with the four papers in this thesis was to explore the effects of everyday music listening on emotions, stress and health. By using the Day Reconstruction Method (DRM), a new approach was taken to study the prevalence of musical emotions in everyday life. In the DRM the previous day is divided into episodes, in terms of activity, experienced emotions, and time of day. The results from study I showed that music occurred in 30 % of the episodes and that positive emotions were more often and more intensively experienced in musical episodes than in non-musical episodes. Music was also related to lower stress levels and higher health scores. The results from study II showed that if music occurred in the episode after a particularly stressful episode, the stress level was lower in both that episode and in the next one compared to if music did not occur. A mediation analysis suggested that the positive emotions induced by the music were mediating the effect of music on stress. The results did also show that liking of the music affected the level of stress. In study III, an experiment group who listened to their selfchosen music on mp3-players when arriving home from work every day for 30 minutes for two weeks’ time was compared to a control group who relaxed without music and with a baseline week when the experiment group relaxed without music. The results showed that although no significant differences were found between the groups, the experiment group showed an increase in intensity of positive emotions and decrease in perceived stress level and cortisol levels over time. No such changes were found within the control group. In study IV, data from study I and III was reanalysed with the purpose of exploring the associations between personality and emotional responses to music. The results showed that the associations between personality and intensity of positive emotions, perceived stress, and use of emotion regulation strategies differed in the two datasets and these inconsistencies indicate that personality is not the main contributor to emotional responses to music. Overall, the results from this thesis indicate that everyday music listening is an easy and effective way of improving well-being and health by its ability to evoke positive emotions and thereby reduce stress. But not just any music will do since the responses to music are influenced by individual and situational factors.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Development and validation of the Healthy-Unhealthy Music Scale

TL;DR: The HUMS is as a promising instrument for screening musical engagement that is indicative of proneness for depression in youth as an indicator of adolescent wellbeing and/or symptomatology.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of background music on food pleasantness ratings

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated whether samples of pleasant, neutral and unpleasant music can impact food perception and found that the presence of non-preferred music significantly decreased the pleasantness ratings of all three types of chocolate gelati tested, while preferred music increased perceived pleasantness rating of dark and bittersweet chocolate gelato.
Dissertation

The Effect of Regular Listening to Preferred Music on Pain, Depression and Anxiety in Older People in Residential Care

Fiona Costa
TL;DR: This paper aims to provide a chronology of the events leading up to and including the publication of this book and some of the key events leading to its publication.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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