Department for Biological and Medical Psychology, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
Department of Biological Psychology, Institute for Experimental Psychology, Heinrich Heine University, Düsseldorf, Germany.
PLoS One. 2023 Jul 28;18(7):e0289302. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0289302. eCollection 2023.
Pain-reducing effects of music listening are well-established, but the effects are small and their clinical relevance questionable. Recent theoretical advances, however, have proposed that synchronizing to music, such as clapping, tapping or dancing, has evolutionarily important social effects that are associated with activation of the endogenous opioid system (which supports both analgesia and social bonding). Thus, active sensorimotor synchronization to music could have stronger analgesic effects than simply listening to music. In this study, we show that sensorimotor synchronization to music significantly amplifies the pain-reducing effects of music listening. Using pressure algometry to the fingernails, pain stimuli were delivered to n = 59 healthy adults either during music listening or silence, while either performing an active tapping task or a passive control task. Compared to silence without tapping, music with tapping (but not simply listening to music) reduced pain with a large, clinically significant, effect size (d = 0.93). Simply tapping without music did not elicit such an effect. Our analyses indicate that both attentional and emotional mechanisms drive the pain-reducing effects of sensorimotor synchronization to music, and that tapping to music in addition to merely listening to music may enhance pain-reducing effects in both clinical contexts and everyday life. The study was registered as a clinical trial at ClinicalTrials.gov (registration number NCT05267795), and the trial was first posted on 04/03/2022.
听音乐能减轻疼痛已得到广泛证实,但效果较小,其临床相关性值得怀疑。然而,最近的理论进展提出,与音乐同步,如拍手、敲击或跳舞,具有进化上重要的社会影响,与内源性阿片系统的激活有关(该系统支持镇痛和社交联系)。因此,主动的感觉运动同步到音乐可能比单纯听音乐具有更强的镇痛效果。在这项研究中,我们表明,音乐的感觉运动同步显著放大了听音乐的镇痛效果。使用指甲压力测痛法,我们向 59 名健康成年人施加疼痛刺激,要么在听音乐或安静时,要么在执行主动敲击任务或被动控制任务时。与不敲击的安静相比,有敲击的音乐(而不仅仅是听音乐)减少了疼痛,其效果大小具有较大的临床意义(d = 0.93)。单纯敲击而没有音乐则没有产生这种效果。我们的分析表明,注意和情感机制都驱动了音乐感觉运动同步的镇痛效果,并且除了单纯听音乐之外,随着音乐敲击可能会增强临床和日常生活中的镇痛效果。该研究在 ClinicalTrials.gov 上作为临床试验进行了注册(注册号 NCT05267795),试验于 2022 年 4 月 3 日首次发布。