Scientific Reports (Jul 2024)

Heart rate-related physiological changes induced by classical music-elicited emotions do not underlie alterations in healthy adults’ ankle joint target-matching strategy

  • Keqing Yuan,
  • Takeshi Okuyama,
  • Tibor Hortobágyi,
  • Ryoichi Nagatomi,
  • János Négyesi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-67467-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Emotions have the potential to modulate human voluntary movement by modifying muscle afferent discharge which in turn may affect kinesthetic acuity. We examined if heart rate (HR)-related physiological changes induced by music-elicited emotions would underlie alterations in healthy young adults’ ankle joint target-matching strategy quantified by joint position sense (JPS). Participants (n = 40, 19 females, age = 25.9 ± 2.9 years) performed ipsilateral-, and contralateral ankle target-matching tasks with their dominant and non-dominant foot using a custom-made foot platform while listening to classical music pieces deemed to evoke happy, sad, or neutral emotions (each n = 10). Participants in the 4th group received no music during the task. Absolute (ABS), constant (CONST), and variable (VAR) target-matching errors and HR-related data were analyzed. Participants performed the contralateral target-matching task with smaller JPS errors when listening to sad vs. happy music (ABS: p 0.05). Overall, our results suggest that music-induced emotions have the potential to affect target-matching strategy and HR-related metrics but the changes in HR-metrics do not underlie the alteration of ankle joint target-matching strategy in response to classical music-elicited emotions.

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