The Impact of Music Perception on Quantitative Sensory Testing (QST)
Stefan Evers, Henning Brameyer, Esther Pogatzki-Zahn

TL;DR
Listening to pleasant music increases sensitivity to certain sensory stimuli during testing, which could affect how pain is measured.
Contribution
This study shows that pleasant music can alter sensory sensitivity during quantitative sensory testing, a novel finding in pain perception research.
Findings
Pleasant music increased sensitivity to cold and mechanical stimuli during testing.
Unpleasant music did not affect sensory sensitivity.
No differences were found between genders or musicians vs. non-musicians.
Abstract
Objective: The impact of listening to music on pain perception has been evaluated using questionnaires and numeric/visual analogue scales. In this study, the impact of music perception on sensory pain functions was measured by means of quantitative sensory testing. Methods: We enrolled 10 female and 10 male healthy subjects (10 of them were professional musicians). All subjects underwent, in total, four quantitative sensory testing measures (first: baseline; second: after pleasant music [Johannes Brahms, 3rd symphony, 3rd movement]; third: after unpleasant music [Krzysztof Penderecki, Threnos]; fourth: after a longer break). The pleasantness of music was evaluated using the Ertel differential scale. Results: After the participants listened to pleasant music, an increased sensitivity to cold stimuli (both threshold and pain), to mechanical stimuli (only for threshold), and to repeated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusic Therapy and Health · Neuroscience and Music Perception · Diverse Music Education Insights
