Classical Music Syncs with the Depressed Brain
Listening to classical orchestral music synchs the brain’s auditory cortex with its ’rewards circuit,’ a promising finding for people with depression.
Sun and his colleagues set out to investigate the specific neural mechanisms through which classical music exerts its antidepressant effects, he said.
The electrodes were placed in a circuit connecting two areas in the forebrain—the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) and the nucleus accumbens (NAc), according to the university. The researchers identified “BNST-NAc oscillatory coupling”—a synching of the auditory cortex and the brain’s “rewards circuit”—as the phenomenon responsible for an antidepressive effect.
The more the patients enjoyed the music they listened to, the more it lifted their mood. “The degree to which subjective enjoyment of the music influenced the antidepressant effects was more pronounced than we initially expected,” Sun told The Epoch Times.
Better Oscillatory Coupling, Better Mood
The patients were divided into two groups: one composed of 13 people who were unfamiliar with classical music (called the UF group) and one composed of 10 people who were more familiar with it (the FA group).
The patients listened to Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 6, “representing sadness,” and the third movement of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7, “representing joy and excitement,” according to the researchers. While the 13 UF patients listened, the researchers simultaneously recorded their electroencephalogram signals and the intracranial recordings from the BNST and NAc regions of their brains.
The patients’ depression was assessed before and after listening to the music using visual analog scales for depression, anxiety, and enjoyment.
When the researchers tested the patients in the FA group, who had been given music segments to listen to three times daily over 14 days, they showed better oscillatory coupling and improved depression symptoms than those in the UF group.
Interestingly, the “mood” of the musical segments the patients listened to (whether sad or joyful) had no effect on depression, anxiety, or enjoyment, suggesting the therapeutic effect of music “may be independent of the emotional effect,” the researchers wrote.
Why Classical Music?
The researchers chose Western classical music because the subjects had little familiarity with it and were less likely to have previously associated memories and emotions with it, they said.
“Classical music is well-documented and studied, offering a rich array of compositions with varying emotional tones, rhythms, and structures that can be carefully selected to examine specific neural responses,” Sun told The Epoch Times. He noted that Asian subjects are often unfamiliar with classical music, making it a more easily controlled variable in that population.
Sun remarked in the university press release that he and his colleagues are optimistic that their findings will prove to be practical and easy to use for people with depression. “Ultimately, we hope to translate our research findings into clinical practice, developing convenient and effective music therapy tools and applications,” he said.
Music that aligns with a person’s preferences is most likely to be beneficial, Sun told The Epoch Times. “People with depression may benefit from listening to music that they enjoy and find soothing, which could include classical music or other genres,” he said.
“Regularly listening to music that resonates with them could help improve mood and reduce depressive symptoms.” However, he noted that music therapy should be considered a complementary treatment to other forms of therapy and medication to treat depression.