LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

A pilot study investigating preferred background sounds during mindfulness meditation: What would you like to hear?

Photo by jblesly from unsplash

BACKGROUND Music and meditation have affirmative effects on the parasympathetic nervous system. OBJECTIVE To investigate individual preferences for background sounds during meditation, using a series of paired, forced-choice comparisons. METHOD… Click to show full abstract

BACKGROUND Music and meditation have affirmative effects on the parasympathetic nervous system. OBJECTIVE To investigate individual preferences for background sounds during meditation, using a series of paired, forced-choice comparisons. METHOD Interventions included music with a distinct melody (one sample) and without a distinct melody (MWDM) (three samples), nature sounds with embedded alpha brainwave pulses (one sample), alpha brainwave pulses alone (one sample), and silence. Participants rated how much they liked hearing a sample during meditation and whether they felt they could meditate deeply while listening to it. Heart rhythm coherence scores were recorded using HeartMath emWavePro software and hardware. Participants were ranked as novice or adept meditators (NM vs AM) based on coherence scores. Rankings were based on preference selections, rating scales, and coherence scores. RESULTS Rankings were highest for silence and MWDM. AMs preferred silence, followed by MWDM. NMs preferred listening to MWDM during meditation. DISCUSSION Those with greater experience preferred meditating in silence. A preference was also seen for a composition style that incorporated altering arrhythmic and rhythmic patterns, and alternating asynchronous and synchronous patterns. CONCLUSION These results indicate a compelling case for further research investigating meditation, music, and the potential interactive effect of the two on mind, body, and personal performance.

Keywords: coherence scores; silence; meditation; background sounds; pilot study; one sample

Journal Title: Work
Year Published: 2019

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.