Music Listening After Stroke: Beneficial Effects and Potential Neural Mechanisms
Journal
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Year
2012
Abstract
Music is an enjoyable leisure activity that also engages many emotional, cognitive, and motor processes in the brain. Here, we will first review previous literature on the emotional and cognitive effects of music listening in healthy persons and various clinical groups. Then we will present findings about the short- and long-term effects of music listening on the recovery of cognitive function in stroke patients and the underlying neural mechanisms of these music effects. First, our results indicate that listening to pleasant music can have a short-term facilitating effect on visual awareness in patients with visual neglect, which is associated with functional coupling between emotional and attentional brain regions. Second, daily music listening can improve auditory and verbal memory, focused attention, and mood as well as induce structural gray matter changes in the early poststroke stage. The psychological and neural mechanisms potentially underlying the rehabilitating effect of music after stroke are discussed.
Music and Health Institute Terms
Cognitive Abilities; Emotional Functioning; Memory; Music Listening; Receptive Music Methods; Stroke
Indexed Terms
Auditory Perception; Cognition; Emotions; Functional Neuroimaging; Models, Neurological; Models, Psychological; Neuronal Plasticity; Neurosciences; Stroke Rehabilitation; Stroke; Visual Perception
Study Type
Editorial, Opinions, Position Papers
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Särkämö, T., & Soto, D. (2012). Music Listening After Stroke: Beneficial Effects and Potential Neural Mechanisms. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1252, 266-81. Retrieved from https://remix.berklee.edu/mhi-citations/1555