Frontiers in Neuroscience (Jul 2023)

Impact of music performance anxiety on cardiovascular blood pressure responses, autonomic tone and baroreceptor sensitivity to a western classical music piano-concert

  • Juan Ángel Moreno-Gutiérrez,
  • Carmen de Rojas Leal,
  • Carmen de Rojas Leal,
  • Carmen de Rojas Leal,
  • Manuel Víctor López-González,
  • Manuel Víctor López-González,
  • Alvaro Chao-Écija,
  • Marc Stefan Dawid-Milner,
  • Marc Stefan Dawid-Milner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1213117
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17

Abstract

Read online

IntroductionMusic Performance Anxiety (MPA) is a prevalent condition among musicians that can manifest both psychologically and physiologically, leading to impaired musical performance. Physiologically, MPA is characterized by excessive muscular and/or autonomic tone. This study focuses on the cardiovascular blood pressure responses, autonomic tone and baroreceptor sensitivity changes that occur during musical performance due to MPA.MethodsSix professional pianists perform a piece for piano written only for the left hand by Alexander Scriabin. The following parameters have been studied during the performance: ECG, non-invasive beat to beat continuous arterial blood pressure and skin conductance. Sympathetic and parasympathetic autonomic flow was studied with Wigner-Ville analysis (W-V) from R-R ECG variability, and baroreceptor sensitivity with the Continuous Wavelet Transform (CWT).ResultsDuring the concert a significant increase of heart rate, systolic, mean and diastolic arterial pressure were observed. No significant differences were found in skin conductance. The W-V analysis, which studies frequency changes in the time domain, shows a significant increase of sympathetic flow and a decrease of parasympathetic flow during the concert which is associated with a significant decrease in sympathetic and vagal baroreceptor sensitivity.DiscussionThe study of cardiac variability using the Wigner-Ville analysis may be a suitable method to assess the autonomic response in the context of MPA, and could be used as biofeedback in personalized multimodal treatments.

Keywords