| Literature DB >> 31941064 |
Abigail M Lindig1, Paul D McGreevy1, Angela J Crean1,2.
Abstract
Music therapy yields many positive health outcomes in humans, but the effects of music on the health and welfare of nonhuman animals vary greatly with the type of music played, the ethology of the species, and the personality and learning history of individual animals. One context in which music therapy may be used to enhance animal welfare is to alleviate stress in domestic environments. Here, we review studies of the effects of music exposure on dogs as a case study for the implementation of music therapy in veterinary medicine. Nine reports of experimental testing for the therapeutic effects of music on dogs were found, with most of these studies focusing on changes in behavior. Overall, exposure to classical music appears to have a calming influence on dogs in stressful environments, with no additional benefit observed from any music purposely designed for dogs (specifically "Through a dog's ear"). Given the cost effectiveness and ease of implementation, music therapy holds promise in veterinary medicine and animal welfare. However, to address precise research questions, further studies must use clearly defined characteristics of stimulus music in the experimental design, and consider the variability of each individual animal's physical characteristics and past experience in the selection of candidates.Entities:
Keywords: behaviour; classical music; dog; enrichment; music therapy; shelter; stress
Year: 2020 PMID: 31941064 PMCID: PMC7022433 DOI: 10.3390/ani10010127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram of study selection.
Studies examining effects of auditory enrichment on canine health and behavior.
| Authors, Year, Ref | Population | Location | Intervention | Measures | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wells, Graham, Hepper 2002 [ | Rehoming Center, UK | Five treatments: | Three behavioral parameters observed: Position in kennel, activity, and vocalization. | More time spent at front of kennels during all auditory interventions. | |
| Kogan, Schoenfeld-Tacher, Simon 2012 [ | Dog shelter and boarding facility, USA | Four treatments: | Three behavioral parameters observed: Activity, vocalization, and body shaking. | No interaction between treatment and group (rescue vs. boarding dogs), although rescue dogs spent more time sleeping and silent. | |
| Bowman, Dowell, Evans, Scottish 2015 [ | Animal rescue and rehoming center, Scotland | Two treatments: | Three behavioral parameters: Position, location, and vocalization. | Classical music exposure induced changes in behavior (less time standing and barking) and altered heart rate variability, indicative of reduced stress. | |
| Brayley, Montrose 2016 [ | Rescue shelter, UK | Five treatments: | 15 behaviors sampled, including multiple measures of activity and vocalization. | Audiobook treatment induced calmer behavior than all other treatments. | |
| Albright, Seddighi, Ng, Sun, Rezac 2017 [ | Veterinary hospital, USA | Five treatments: | Depth of sedation assessed by spontaneous behavior, accelerometry, and restraint tests. | Sedation is negatively impacted by high-intensity noise conditions (80–85 dB) | |
| Bowman, Dowell, Evans, Scottish 2017 [ | Animal rescue and rehoming center, Scotland | Six treatments: | Three behavioral parameters: Position, location, and vocalization. | Music exposure (all genres) induced changes in behavior (less time standing) and altered heart rate variability, indicative of reduced stress. | |
| Engler, Bain 2017 [ | Veterinary teaching hospital, USA | Three treatments: | Owners and clinicians completed a standardized survey regarding dogs’ behavior. | No difference in behavior (aggression, anxiety) or physiology (body temperature and heart rate) of dogs detected. | |
| Alves, Santos, Lopes, Jorge 2018 [ | Police canine unit, Portugal | Two treatments: | Puppies’ performance in a skills test (9 scenarios ranging from following and submission to startle response and pain sensibility) evaluated at 7 weeks of age. | Auditory stimulation had a negative effect upon puppies’ performance overall, in particular on following, lifting by evaluator, and submission tests. | |
| Koster, Sithole, Gilbert, Artemiou 2019 [ | Veterinary teaching hospital, West Indies | Two treatments: | Heart rate variability | Auditory stimulation reduced RR variability, suggesting the novel music exposure had an excitatory rather than a calming effect. |
Sample of studies examining effects of auditory enrichment on health and behavior of non-canine species.
| Ref | Species | Location | Intervention | Measures | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uetake, Hurnik, Johnson 1997 [ | Holstein cows ( | Dairy Research Center, Canada | Cows conditioned to identify the start of the milking period when they heard music (Country music) | Number of cows in holding area | Music stimulates the voluntary approach of cows to holding area and encourages behavioral readiness of cows to milking |
| Nunez et al. 2002 [ | BALB/c mice ( | Lab animal facility, Spain | Four treatments: | Mice: Immune function (e.g., thymus and spleen cell counts and viability, T cell proliferation) | Music enhanced immune parameters and anti-tumor response in unstressed rodents. |
| Lemmer 2008 [ | Wistar-Kyoto rats ( | Lab animal facility, Germany | Four treatments: | Radiotelemetry to monitor blood pressure, heart rate, and motor activity. | Mozart and Ligeti had different effects on physiology, with more effects detected in hypertensive rats. |
| Davilla et al. 2011 [ | Layer chicks ( | Conservation program experimental station, Spain | Two treatments: | Fear (tonic immobility duration) | Significantly higher heterophil to lymphocyte ratios in chicks reared without music. |
| Wallace et al. 2013 [ | Moloch gibbons ( | Wild Animal Park, UK | Two treatments: | Activity | No significant differences in behavior between music and control treatments. |
| Li et al. 2019 [ | Piglets ( | Commercial sow farm, China | Five treatments: | Entries to room | Piglets spent significantly more time in the slow/string and fast/wind rooms compared to the other music conditions. |