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Experimental modulation of mood by acoustic stimulation and its effect on exertional dyspnoea

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posted on 2019-07-01, 00:00 authored by Pramod Sharma, Liam Hall, Norman R Morris, Surendran Sabapathy, Lewis Adams
We examined the interactions between acoustically driven mood modulation and dyspnoea. Following familiarisation, 18 healthy participants attended three experimental sessions on separate days performing two 5 min treadmill tests with a 30 min interval per session while listening to either a positive, negative or neutral set of standardised International Affective Digitised Sounds (IADS). Participants rated intensity and affective domains of dyspnoea during the first exercise test and mood during the second. Mood valence was significantly higher when listening to positive (mean (95% CI): 6.5 (5.9-7.2)) compared with negative sounds (3.6 (2.9-4.4); p<0.001). Dyspnoea intensity and affect were statistically significantly lower when listening to positive (2.4 (1.8-2.9) and 1.3 (0.7-1.9)) compared with negative IADS (3.2 (2.3-3.7), p=0.013 and 2.3 (1.3-3.3), p=0.009). These findings indicate that acoustically induced mood changes influence exertional dyspnoea.

History

Journal

Thorax

Volume

74

Pagination

707-710

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0040-6376

eISSN

1468-3296

Language

eng

Publication classification

CN Other journal article

Copyright notice

2019, The Authors

Issue

7

Publisher

B M J Group

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