Fagerland Steffen Maude, Løve Andreas, Helliesen Tord K, Martinsen Ørjan Grøttem, Revheim Mona-Elisabeth, Endestad Tor
The Intervention Centre, Oslo University Hospital, 0372 Oslo, Norway.
RITMO Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Rhythm, Time, and Motion, Department of Psychology, University of Oslo, 0313 Oslo, Norway.
Sensors (Basel). 2025 Mar 14;25(6):1807. doi: 10.3390/s25061807.
The act of performing music may induce a specific state of mind, musicians potentially becoming immersed and detached from the rest of the world. May this be measured? Does this state of mind change based on repetition? In collaboration with Stavanger Symphony Orchestra (SSO), we developed protocols to investigate ongoing changes in the brain activation of a first violinist and a second violinist in real time during seven sequential, public concerts using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). Using wireless fNIRS systems (Brite MKII) from Artinis, we measured ongoing hemodynamic changes and projected the brain activation to the audience through the software OxySoft 3.5.15.2. We subsequently developed protocols for further analyses through the Matlab toolboxes Brainstorm and Homer2/Homer3. Our developed protocols demonstrate how one may use "functional dissection" to imply how the state of mind of musicians may alter while performing their art. We focused on a subset of cortical regions in the right hemisphere, but the current study demonstrates how fNIRS may be used to shed light on brain dynamics related to producing art in ecological and natural contexts on a general level, neither restricted to the use of musical instrument nor art form.
演奏音乐的行为可能会引发一种特定的心理状态,音乐家有可能沉浸其中并与外界隔绝。这种状态可以被测量吗?这种心理状态会随着重复而改变吗?我们与斯塔万格交响乐团(SSO)合作,开发了一些方案,以使用功能近红外光谱技术(fNIRS)在七场连续的公开音乐会期间实时研究首席小提琴手和第二小提琴手大脑激活的持续变化。我们使用Artinis公司的无线fNIRS系统(Brite MKII),测量持续的血液动力学变化,并通过OxySoft 3.5.15.2软件将大脑激活情况投射给观众。随后,我们通过Matlab工具箱Brainstorm和Homer2/Homer3开发了进一步分析的方案。我们开发的方案展示了如何使用“功能剖析”来揭示音乐家在表演艺术时心理状态可能如何变化。我们专注于右半球的一部分皮质区域,但当前的研究表明,一般来说,fNIRS如何可用于揭示在生态和自然环境中与创作艺术相关的大脑动态,既不限于乐器的使用,也不限于艺术形式。