Listening to Music and Pain (01-05-12)
Research readily available to healthcare designers for some time has indicated that listening to music seems to reduce the perceived painfulness of medical procedures.
Research readily available to healthcare designers for some time has indicated that listening to music seems to reduce the perceived painfulness of medical procedures.
Levitan continues to investigate the psychological implications of listening to music.
Johansson and his colleagues have studied how important music selection is when it is broadcast in areas where people are trying to concentrate.
The effect of music in the workplace? It depends.
Music influences customer satisfaction, and scientists have a reason why.
People have consistent responses to particular sounds and rhythms cross-culturally.
Researchers working at McGill University have been methodically exploring the influence of music on human experience.
Chapin and colleagues investigated variations in emotional responses to a piece of music.
Patients on ventilators listening to music experience less stress than ventilated patients not listening to music.
Kampfe, Sedimeier, and Renkewitz analyzed information from several studies of the effects of background music on cognitive performance.