Turan Bulent, Hurst-Wajszczuk Kristine, Edwards David A
Department of Psychology, Koc University, Istanbul, Turkey.
Department of Music, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, 35294-1152, USA.
Compr Psychoneuroendocrinol. 2022 Jan 5;9:100111. doi: 10.1016/j.cpnec.2022.100111. eCollection 2022 Feb.
Performance anxiety is common in a wide range of settings. This study was designed to explore the hormonal correlates of a music performance recital - a setting commonly associated with extreme and often unsettling anxiety linked to the anticipation of performing. Thirty-nine college undergraduate participants (24 women and 15 men) were recruited from students enrolled in an undergraduate music performance course. Each gave a saliva sample on a neutral non-performance day and gave additional samples immediately before and 10 and 30-min after each of two solo music recitals. Samples were subsequently assayed for cortisol, alpha-amylase, and testosterone. For women, pre-performance salivary cortisol levels were significantly elevated relative to neutral-day baseline (presumably in anticipation of performing) and continued to rise in association with the performance phase of the recital. Pre-performance alpha-amylase was significantly higher than neutral-day baseline. Testosterone increased in connection with the performance phase of the recital, but not during the anticipation phase. For all three products, patterns for men were generally similar to those for women, though not as statistically robust, perhaps owing to the smaller sample size. Increases in cortisol and alpha-amylase, from neutral-day to immediately pre-performance on recital day, suggest an effect related to the psychological anticipation of the recital. Cortisol and testosterone (but not alpha-amylase) increased in association with the performance phase of the recital. Phase-related changes in these products appears to reflect a coordinated response to the stress of a music recital and perhaps, more generally, to social-evaluative threat.
表演焦虑在广泛的情境中都很常见。本研究旨在探索音乐表演独奏会的激素关联——这是一种通常与因预期表演而产生的极端且往往令人不安的焦虑相关的情境。从参加本科音乐表演课程的学生中招募了39名大学本科生参与者(24名女性和15名男性)。每个人在非表演的平常日子提供一份唾液样本,并在两场独奏音乐会的每一场之前、之后10分钟和30分钟立即提供额外的样本。随后对样本进行皮质醇、α-淀粉酶和睾酮检测。对于女性来说,表演前唾液皮质醇水平相对于平常日子的基线显著升高(大概是由于对表演的预期),并且在独奏会的表演阶段持续上升。表演前α-淀粉酶显著高于平常日子的基线。睾酮在独奏会的表演阶段增加,但在预期阶段没有增加。对于所有这三种物质,男性的模式通常与女性相似,尽管在统计学上没有那么显著,这可能是由于样本量较小。从平常日子到独奏会当天表演前即刻,皮质醇和α-淀粉酶的增加表明与独奏会的心理预期有关。皮质醇和睾酮(但不是α-淀粉酶)在独奏会的表演阶段增加。这些物质与阶段相关的变化似乎反映了对音乐独奏会压力的协调反应,也许更普遍地说,是对社会评价威胁的反应。