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Evaluating the Impact of Social Music
Sponsor: Yale University
Summary
Mental health vulnerability due to stress is increased in People of African Descent (PADs) in America due to disproportionate effects of racism, poverty, education, and criminal justice sentencing. Various meditation and mindfulness approaches have provided evidence of measured reductions in multiple negative dimensions of stress. However, the majority of these studies do not have an adequate representation of PADs or other marginalized groups and are not designed to be culturally relevant or community based. Music has been shown to alleviate multiple symptoms of stress and has been shown to be a preferred and effective support for meditation and mindfulness. However, its role in stress management in PADs engaged in meditation or mindfulness is seldom studied. This study aims to evaluate the effects of a virtual, community-based music mindfulness program on stress management in PAD community members with anxiety and depression during COVID19. 2b. Social Music Study: Investigators will assess the neural mechanisms of feelings of subjective connectedness during communal music listening and creating between dyads of subjects who are both familiar and unfamiliar with each other.
Official title: Evaluating the Impact of Community-Based Mindfulness and Musical Programs on Psychiatric Measures, Social Music Study 2b.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
16 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
48
Start Date
2024-08-01
Completion Date
2026-03
Last Updated
2026-02-12
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Music
Participants in dyads will be positioned across from each other while listening to various types of music (i.e. music that is harmonically-intact and music in which the harmonic content has been randomly scrambled).
Locations (2)
BLOOM
New Haven, Connecticut, United States
Musical Intervention Studios
New Haven, Connecticut, United States