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      Preliminary evidence: the stress-reducing effect of listening to water sounds depends on somatic complaints : A randomized trial

      research-article
      , PhD a , , PhD b , , PhD c ,
      Medicine
      Wolters Kluwer Health
      acoustic stimulation, cortisol, somatic complaints, stress, water sounds

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          Abstract

          Background:

          Listening to natural sounds is applied in health contexts in order to induce relaxation. However, it remains unclear whether this effect is equally efficacious in all individuals or whether it depends on interindividual differences. Given that individuals differ in how they are impaired by somatic complaints, we investigated whether somatic complaints moderate the stress-reducing effect of listening to water sounds.

          Methods:

          Sixty healthy women (M age = 25 years) were randomly allocated to 3 different conditions (listening to water sounds, a relaxing piece of music, or no auditory stimulus: n = 20 per condition) for 10 minutes before they were exposed to a standardized psychosocial stress task. Salivary cortisol was assessed before, during, and after the stress task. For binary logistic regression analyses, participants were divided into 2 groups: 1 group with a high salivary cortisol release and 1 group with low cortisol release. The Freiburg Complaints Inventory was used to assess occurrence of somatic complaints.

          Results:

          A significant moderating effect of somatic complaints on cortisol secretion was found in the group listening to water sounds ( χ 2(1) = 5.87, P < .015) but not in the other 2 groups, explaining 35.7% of the variance and correctly classifying 78.9% of the cases.

          Conclusion:

          The stress-reducing effect of listening to water sounds appears to depend on the occurrence of somatic complaints. This effect was not found in the music or silence condition. Individuals with somatic complaints may benefit from other, potentially more powerful forms of stress-reducing interventions, that is, combinations of visual and auditory stimuli.

          Trial Registration:

          not applicable (pilot study)

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          Most cited references24

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          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          The impacts of nature experience on human cognitive function and mental health.

          Scholars spanning a variety of disciplines have studied the ways in which contact with natural environments may impact human well-being. We review the effects of such nature experience on human cognitive function and mental health, synthesizing work from environmental psychology, urban planning, the medical literature, and landscape aesthetics. We provide an overview of the prevailing explanatory theories of these effects, the ways in which exposure to nature has been considered, and the role that individuals' preferences for nature may play in the impact of the environment on psychological functioning. Drawing from the highly productive but disparate programs of research in this area, we conclude by proposing a system of categorization for different types of nature experience. We also outline key questions for future work, including further inquiry into which elements of the natural environment may have impacts on cognitive function and mental health; what the most effective type, duration, and frequency of contact may be; and what the possible neural mechanisms are that could be responsible for the documented effects. © 2012 New York Academy of Sciences.
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            Depression and cortisol responses to psychological stress: a meta-analysis.

            The purpose of this meta-analysis is to examine the association between depression and cortisol responses to psychological stressors. A total of seven studies comparing plasma or cortisol responses to psychological stressors in clinically depressed (MDD) and non-depressed (ND) individuals (N = 196: 98 MDD, 98 ND; 83 men, 113 women; mean age = 40 years) were included. Sample size-adjusted effect sizes (Cohen's d statistic) were calculated and averaged across baseline (before stressor onset), stress (stressor onset up to 25 min after stressor offset), and recovery (more than 25 min after stressor offset) periods. Overall, MDD and ND individuals exhibited similar baseline and stress cortisol levels, but MDD patients had much higher cortisol levels during the recovery period than their ND counterparts. There was also a significant time of day effect in which afternoon studies were more likely to reveal higher baseline cortisol levels, blunted stress reactivity, and impaired recovery in MDD patients. This blunted reactivity-impaired recovery pattern observed among the afternoon studies was most pronounced in studies with older and more severely depressed patients.
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              • Record: found
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              Is Open Access

              Stress Recovery during Exposure to Nature Sound and Environmental Noise

              Research suggests that visual impressions of natural compared with urban environments facilitate recovery after psychological stress. To test whether auditory stimulation has similar effects, 40 subjects were exposed to sounds from nature or noisy environments after a stressful mental arithmetic task. Skin conductance level (SCL) was used to index sympathetic activation, and high frequency heart rate variability (HF HRV) was used to index parasympathetic activation. Although HF HRV showed no effects, SCL recovery tended to be faster during natural sound than noisy environments. These results suggest that nature sounds facilitate recovery from sympathetic activation after a psychological stressor.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Medicine (Baltimore)
                Medicine (Baltimore)
                MEDI
                Medicine
                Wolters Kluwer Health
                0025-7974
                1536-5964
                February 2018
                23 February 2018
                : 97
                : 8
                : e9851
                Affiliations
                [a ]Psychopathology and Clinical Intervention, Department of Psychology, University of Zurich, Switzerland
                [b ]Outpatient Department for Research, Teaching and Practice, Department of Psychology
                [c ]Clinical Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
                Author notes
                []Correspondence: Urs M. Nater, Faculty of Psychology, Division of Clinical Psychology, University of Vienna, Liebiggasse 5, 1010 Vienna, Austria (e-mail: urs.nater@ 123456univie.ac.at ).
                Article
                MD-D-17-04937 09851
                10.1097/MD.0000000000009851
                5842016
                29465568
                ddecb4a7-b71e-4ea6-b8a0-b5ff4f18ed07
                Copyright © 2018 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives License 4.0 (CCBY-NC-ND), where it is permissible to download and share the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially without permission from the journal. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0

                History
                : 8 August 2017
                : 20 January 2018
                : 22 January 2018
                Categories
                6500
                Research Article
                Clinical Trial/Experimental Study
                Custom metadata
                TRUE

                acoustic stimulation,cortisol,somatic complaints,stress,water sounds

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