1 / 12

Music Therapy

Music Therapy. Gavin Degen , Marissa Earley , Tara Furlong, & Will Matthews. Background.

yepa
Download Presentation

Music Therapy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Music Therapy Gavin Degen, Marissa Earley, Tara Furlong, & Will Matthews

  2. Background • Music Therapy (as defined by musictherapy.org) is the use of music interventions to accomplish individualized goals within a therapeutic relationship by a credentialed professional who has completed an approved music therapy program. • The national leader in music therapy is the American Music Therapy Association (AMTA). • The AMTA was founded in 1998 in a merger between the National Association for Music Therapy (NAMT) and the American Association for Music Therapy (AAMT). • A certified music therapist must have a Bachelor’s degree or higher in Music Therapy and be certified through the Certification Board for Music Therapists (CBMT).

  3. History • It is believed that music therapy was first mentioned in writing by Aristotle and Plato. • The profession formally began just after WWII when musicians started playing at Veterans hospitals to cheer up wounded soldiers. • As the mental & physical health of the soldiers improved, the doctors began to request on-staff musicians in the hospitals. • E. Thayer Gaston, known as the father of music therapy, spearheaded the effort to improve the quality of music therapy from an academic standpoint. • The CBMT was created in 1983 to give qualified professionals added credibility.

  4. Physiological Effects of Music • Humans vs. Animals: Music Affects the Brain • As a species: brain is unlike any other species; music causes brain regions to respond in different ways. • Triggers emotions and feelings • Causes memories to resurface • Brings groups of people together: Concerts • Collectivist need. • Lyrics and beats mirror body’s processes: words speaking thoughts, pounding in the heart.

  5. Music Entering the Brain • Different parts respond to different aspects. • 1. Auditory Cortex brings stimulus through ear to brain. Lasting impressions of song/melody; makes it recognizable. • 2. Frontal, Parietal, and Temporal lobes: process how it makes us feel. • Rhythm: keeping time requires auditory cortex, cerebellum, parietal cortexes, and frontal cortexes.

  6. How Music Effects Areas of the Brain • Brain Imaging helped detect active parts of the n brain while listening to music. • 3. Corpus Callosum: connects brain so music interpretation is diffused. • 4. Sensory cortex: Depending on stimuli, feedback is given after playing instrument, dancing, etc. i.e.: energized or lethargic. • 5. Motor Cortex: Depending on the beat, this is where body decides how body reacts to music; foot tapping, dancing, bobbing head. • 6. Prefrontal Cortex: area of judgment for a song. Forms expectations. Success of song is decided; listening to favorite band, artist you dislike. • 7. Hippocampus: Memories associated with music; location, who you were with. Nucleus Accumbens: emotional reactions/memories to music; how you felt when you heard the song. • 8. Visual Cortex: May seem unrelated HOWEVER! As music travels through ear to brain, sights we see help form perceptions about melody. Same occurrence while reading music/watching a performance.

  7. The Research • Studies have shown music therapy reduces anxiety and stress levels. • Suggested that, while paired with some drug therapy, it can reduce pain. Pain is perceived in brain; music therapy possibly neutralizing this stimuli. • Higher levels of Immunoglobin A. Strengthens body’s immune system. • Replace drug therapy? More cost effective, easier on the human body, no damaging side effects.

  8. Emotional Effects of Music Therapy • Feelings: isolation, depression, tension, loss, grief & pain • Music Therapy = comfort • Whole families cope • Hope

  9. Stages of Music Therapy in Cancer Patients • Contact= • Trust between the therapist, patient & family • Working Relationship • Awareness= • Focus on oneself • Feelings, needs & desires • Resolution= • Letting go • Connect to the world & themselves

  10. Music Therapy is Experienced Differently • Connect sensory systems • Music helps people connect to others • Sounds send messages based on experience • Positive memories help with coping

  11. Is Music Therapy Effective?

  12. Is Music Therapy Effective?

More Related