Proof that your doctor should be sending you to an outdoor concert so you can sing along.
http://www.maitlandmercury.com.au/story/1654537/singing-a-healthier-life/?cs=171
Singing in a choir can help those recovering from stroke and brain injury, a Hunter researcher has discovered.
According
to a Swedish research project – involving Hunter Medical Research
Institute director Michael Nilsson – the cardiovascular impacts of choir
singing may have implications for stroke and brain injury recovery.
The
study titled “Music determines heart rate variability of singers” has
revealed that when people sing in a choir their pulses become
synchronised.
The researchers believe that singing demands a
slower than normal respiration, which is coupled with heart rate
variability known as Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia. RSA is seen to be
more marked during slow-paced breathing and at lower respiration rates.
“Previous
research has found that musicians performing together have synchronised
brain waves and now we’re seeing it with the heart rate,” Professor
Nilsson, a translational specialist in neuroscience, said.
“The
object of this study is to find new forms where music may be used for
medical purposes, primarily within rehabilitation and preventative
care.”
An example is the Hunter Medical Research Institute’s Brainwaves Choir.
“The
choir has shown that participating in music and being in a happy
environment has important benefits for mental health and may help the
language centre recover as well.”
The next step for investigators
will see whether the biological synchronisation of choral singers can
create a shared mental perspective that strengthens the ability to
collaborate.
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