| Literature DB >> 33915896 |
José Salvador Blasco-Magraner1, Gloria Bernabe-Valero2, Pablo Marín-Liébana1, Carmen Moret-Tatay2.
Abstract
Interest in the study of emotions in education has grown in recent years. Some of our modern challenges, such as constantly adapting to new scenarios or the need for team work have justified the introduction of emotional competence into educational systems, while diverse studies confirm the relationship between music and emotional intelligence, so that the former could be used as a tool to develop the latter. The aim of this work was to examine the evidence for positive effects of music on the emotions of 3- to 12-year-old children, to which end a systematic review was carried out. Two reviewers independently evaluated 424 studies that were identified in MEDLINE, Psycinfo, and CINAHL databases, in order to determine whether they met the stated inclusion criteria. A total of 26 articles were selected for review. The results suggest several beneficial effects of music on children's development, such as greater emotional intelligence, academic performance, and prosocial skills. It can therefore be concluded that music should be used in school settings, not only as an important subject in itself, but also as an educational tool within other subjects.Entities:
Keywords: emotional education; music education; school environment; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33915896 PMCID: PMC8037606 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18073668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flowchart to show study selection process [60].
Table showing reasons items were excluded.
| Exclusion Criteria | Total Items Excluded |
|---|---|
| The work does not specifically address the research question | 259 |
| Not an empirical study | 58 |
| Children were not within the age range 3–12 years old | 41 |
| Sample of participants included mixed ages | 12 |
| Sample | 3 |
| Not an article | 7 |
Figure 2Evolution of publications.
Distribution of identified topics.
| Topic | Frequency | Examples | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Emotional intelligence | Perception, assessment and expression | 42.31% | Recognition, identification, expression, discrimination |
| Emotional regulation | 7.69% | Management, regulation, reaction | |
| Educational and training benefits | 42.31% | Improvements in spelling, mathematics, reading comprehension, motivation, values, creativity | |
| Socio-emotional benefits | 26.92% | Reduced Aggressiveness, better empathy, development of pro-social skills | |
(A)
| Study | N | Age | Educational Setting | Primary Purpose of Study | Study Design | Music Variables | Emotion | Music Style | Relevant Data Collection Measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moore & Hanson-Abromeit [ | 8 | 3 to 5 | Preschool | To examine feasibility and preliminary efficacy of the Musical Contour Regulation Facilitation (MCRF) intervention, a multi-session strategy for promoting ER development in preschoolers | Case study | To participate in the MCRF intervention | Emotion understanding accuracy; emotional regulation; child’s expression of emotion | Not specified | Language Development Survey (part of ASEBA; Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000); Emotion Regulation Checklist (ERC; Shields & CIcchetti, 1997, 1998); Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) and Caregiver-Teacher Report Form (C-TRF), both part of the ASEBA (Asenbach & Rescorla, 2000) |
| Boone & Cunningham [ | 47 | 3 to 6 | Preschool | To determine if children can accurately express the emotional meaning in music through expressive movement | Observational | 12 music segments previously identified as belonging to one emotional category (happiness, sadness, ange or fear) | Happiness, sadness, anger, or fear | (1) Romanian Rhapsody, Opus 11/Enesco; (2) Peter Gynt; Ase’s Death, Suite No. 1, Opus 46/Grieg; (3) Theme to Lifeforce/Mancini; (4) Surprise Attack The Wrath of Khan/Horner; (5) Concerto in D, Opus 35/Tschaikovsky; (6) The Humorous Song/Lyadov (7) The Rite of Spring/Stravinsky (8) The Red Poppy, the Russian Sailor’s Dance/Gliere (9) Winter Games/Foster (10) Anvil of Crom, Conan/Poledouris (11) Venus/Holst; (12) The Walls Converge, Star Wars. Williams | Ad hoc observational registration |
| Brown & Sax [ | 205 | 4 | Preschool | To examine the impact of arts-integrated preschool programming on the emotional func-tioning of low-income children at risk for school problems | Correlational | Participate in an arts integrated preschool program | Emotion understanding, empathy, emotional lability, anger reactivity, negative emotion intensity | Not specified: music, dance, and visual arts class | Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-III (PPVT-III; Dunn & Dunn, 1997); Emotion Regulation Checklist (ERC; Shields & Cicchetti, 1997); and an adapted version of the Affex system, which is grounded in DET (izard, Dougherty, & Hembree, 1989) |
| Habibi et al. [ | 45 | 6 to 7 | Out of school | To determine whether children who participate in musical training were different, prior to training, from children in the control groups in terms of cognitive, motor, musical, emotional, and social | Cross-sectional between subjects; experimental (controlled trial, non-randomized sample) | To be involved in a systematic and high intensity musicaltraining, and music perception | Emotional recognition and empathy | Not specified. Gordon’s | Auditory analysis test (Rosner and Simon, 1971); Gordon’s primary measures of music audiation (PMMA; Gordon, 1986); Reading the Mind in the Eyes (Baron-Cohen et al., 2001); Index of Empathy for Children (Bryant, 1982); video emotion test (Goldstein adn Winner, 2012); Helping and sharing test (ad hoc) |
| Nieminen et al. [ | 127 | 6 to 9 | Elementary school | To investigate the effects of age, gender, and music education on musical preference, musical emotion recognition, and the use of the aesthetic categories for music | Cross-sectional between subjects; experimental (non-randomized sample) | Musical preference and musical mode (major, minor and free tonal) | Beauty, ugliness, happiness and sadness | Three short musical pieces (20 s each) resembling familiar children’s songs of Western music | Ad hoc questionnaire and task |
| Ramdane et al. [ | 186 | 6 to 12 | Elementary school | To investigate the usefulness of using music and songs by Islamic Education teachers | Correlational | Using music at the classroom | Emotional awareness | Not specified | Ad hoc questionnaire and interviews |
| Jeremic et al. [ | 89 | 7 | Elementary school | To study the effect of vocal performance as a teaching method in relation to the social-emotional competencies (SEC) of pupils | Cross-sectional between subjects; experimental (controlled trial, non-randomized sample) | The vocal performance teaching method | Empathy, impulsivity, emotional control and reactions | Songs by ear where the basic psychological processes take place when singing accompanied by elements of vocal technique. Perceptual characteristics include singing by ear, tone of voice and resonance | Scale for assessment of social-emotional competencies of students (SEC) |
| Schellenberg & Mankarious [ | 60 | 7 to 8 | Out of school | To examine whether music training in childhood is predictive of understanding emotions | Correlational | Child’s history of music lessons | Emotion recognition | Not specified | Test of Emotion Comprehension (TEC; Pons & Harris, 2000), and Weschler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence (WASI; Weschler, 1999) |
| Pimenta & Trevisan [ | 31 | 7 to 9 | Elementary school | To analyze the influence of music in promoting changes in the relationship established by students of recovery class with school activities | Case study | Activities with music, musical compositions | Aggressive, loud and disinterested in the classroom versus calm, participatory and interested in music gatherings | Not specified | Ad hoc instruments |
| Rauduvaite [ | 70 | 7 to 9 | Elementary school | To analize how popular music can educate | Observational | Popular music repertoire | Positive emotions towards learning | Popular music. “Mom” song (music by R. Sileika, lyrics by D. Teiserskyte). | Ad hoc instruments |
| Kang [ | 3 | 7 to 10 | Elementary school | To examine the possibility of supportive music and imagery (MI) in addition to sandplay as a therapeutic treatment to improve emotional and behavioral adaptability for child witnesses of domestic violence | Case study | Create music through improvisation with musical instruments or their voices | Emotional behavioral problems including depression, aggression, anxiety, oppositional | Hello song, Goodbye song. | Korean Child Behavior Checklist (K-CBCL) |
| Soulier [ | 234 | 7 to 11 | Elementary school | To study the effect of an emotional induction by music on the grammatical spelling performances of primary-school pupils | Cross-sectional between subjects: experimental (non-randomized) | Exposure to musical excerpts judged to be emotionally neutral, happy, and sad | Positive, negative emotions and neutral emotions | Musical excerpts with emotional valences: positive, negative and neutral: (1) Adagio en sol mineur—Tomaso Albinoni; (2) Nocturne C# Min op. Postuma-Frédéric Chopin (3) Prélude n◦ 4—Frédéric Chopin; (4) La mort d’Ase. Peer Gynt-Edvard Grieg; (5) Adagio pour cordes-Samuel Barber; (6) Danse des heures-Amilcare Ponchielli; (7) Le Sacre du printemps-Igor Stravinsky; (8) Dans l’Antre du roi de la montage-Edvard Grieg; (9) Marche Slave-Piotr Ilitch Tchaïkovsky; (10) Danse Arabe-Piotr Ilitch Tchaïkovsky; (11) Danse chinoise-Piotr Ilitch Tchaïkovsky; (12) Le Carnaval des animaux-Camille Saint-Saëns; (13) Au matin-Edvard Grieg; (14) Bolero-Maurice Ravel; (15) Symphonie n 6—Ludwig van Beethoven | The ECS Cycle III spelling test (Evaluation of School Skills, Cycle of Advanced Studies developed by Khomsi, 1998) |
| Kim & Kim [ | 60 | 7 to 12 | Elementary school | To determine the effects of a musical instrument performance program on emotional intelligence, anxiety, and aggression | Cross-sectional between subjects; experimental (nonequivalent control group pretest-posttest study) | Musical instrument performance program | Emotional intelligence, anxiety, and aggression | Not specified. A children’s song, sonata, or the flute part of an ensemble work for their level. | The Emotional Intelligence Scale, the Trait Anxiety Inventory, and the Aggression Scale |
| Schellenberg et al. [ | 84 | 8 | Elementary school | To examine whether social benefits are accrued from more typical group music training, specifically an existing program that was designed with music pedagogy as its focus | Cross-sectional between subjects; experimental (controlled trial, non-randomized sample) | Attending public schools that incorporated this specialized program | Emotion comprehension, sympathy and prosocial skills | The repertoire includes arrangements of music taken from classical, jazz, traditional/folk, world, and popular genres | Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, Test of Emotion Comprehension, and Child-Report Sympathy Scale |
| Teske et al. [ | 14 | 8 to 9 | Elementary school | To determine the effects of positive mood induction through upbeat music and simulated laughter on creativity | Cross-sectional between subjects; experimental (controlled trial, non-randomized sample) | Listening to a couple of minutes of upbeat instrumental music | Positive mood and humor | Instrumental music with a lively beat | Ad hoc task |
| Venegas et al. [ | 67 | 8 to 13 | Elementary school | To assess the emotional satisfaction of students while using a cross-disciplinary software that links music and maths | Case study | Use of AudioGraphics software | 7 positive and 7 negative (unpaired) emotions | Not specified | Ad hoc instruments |
| Tricard et al. [ | 83 | 9 to 10 | Elementary school | To examine the influence of inducing positive and negative emotional states on deductive reasoning performances | Cross-sectional between subjects; experimental (controlled trials, non-randomized sample) | To be exposed to video clips and music | Happines and sadness | Music of movies: (1) « Beach Day » of Blanket Barricade; (2) « Adagio for Strings » of Samuel Barber; (3) Background sounds of nature | Facial Action Coding System (Westermann et al., 1996) |
| Yun & Kim [ | 43 | 9 to 12 | Elementary school | To verify whether the Orff Approach is a proper program to be used with potentially problematic children in order to increase their self-expression, self-efficacy, and social skills | Cross-sectional between subjects; experimental (controlled trial, non-randomized sample) | The Orff Approach method | Self-expression, self-efficacy, self-confidence, self-regulation efficacy and social skills, | Not specified | Self-expression measure (Byun and Kim, 1980); self-efficacy measure (Han, 2002); social skills measure (Mun, 2006) |
| Katagiri [ | 12 | 9 to 15 | Out of school | To examine the effect of background music and song texts to teach emotional understanding to children with autism | Cross-sectional between groups; experimental (controlled trial, non-randomized sample, counterbalanced treatment) | Background music or singing song, both related to each studied emotion | (1) Type of emotion (happiness, sadness, anger, and fear), and (2) receptive or expressive skill of emotional understanding | Not specified (background music was improvised on the piano and recorded by four pianists skilled at improvisation. Musical cues were taken from Juslin (2000), in which each emotion was associated with a specified tempo, sound level, frequency spectrum, articulation (legato-staccato) and articulation variability. Music recordings representing the four emotions) | Emotional decoding and encoding tasks |
| Campayo et al. [ | 3 | 10 | Out of school | To examine the relationship between intrapersonal skills and the musical performance of elementary students studying the piano in a Spanish conservatory | Action-research | curricula for the trird year of piano studies | Emotional awareness, regulation and autonomy | Not specified | Ad hoc semi-structured interviews, Teacher´s diary, Video-recordings, CE-360 Assessment protocol |
| Cook et al. [ | 65 | 10 to 11 | Elementary school | This study evaluated the impact of music-based contact with autistic peers on the attitudes, emotions and behaviors of neurotypical children | Cross-sectional between subjects; experimental (controlled trial, non-randomized sample) | Music-based contact with autistic peers | Prosocial | Not specified (They received 11 weekly singing classes − 35 min in length—that were specifically designed to help children develop their social skills, musical engagement and communication between singers) | Social Behaviour Questionnaire (Tremblay et al., 1991) modified; Child-Report Sympathy Scale (Eisenberg et al., 1996) modified; victim scale from the Bullying Prevalence Questionnaire (Rigby and Slee, 1993); bully scale from the Bullying Prevalence Questionnaire (Rigby and Slee, 1993); and ad hoc questionnaire |
| Lebaka [ | 8 | 10 to 11 | Elementary school | To examine whether selected songs songs are relevant for enriching attitudes and cultural values of children | Descriptive | 31 songs collected from Bapedi women. Techniques of playing brass and percussion instruments; singing and reading music; and improvisation | Self-confidence and prosocial | Traditional Pedi religious songs | Ad hoc instruments |
| Ho et al. [ | 101 | 10 to 12 | Elementary school | To assess the effects of 12 weeks of school counselorled drumming on social-emotional | Cross-sectional between subjects; experimental (controlled trial, non-randomized sample) | Participation in a 12 weeks of school-counselorled drumming program | Emotion management (anxiety, depression, withdrawn, somatic complaints, rule-breaking, | Not specified (A hybrid of activities used in contemporary drum circles) | Teacher’s Report Form (teacher version of the Child Behaviour Checklist) |
| Porta [ | 163 | 10 to 12 | Elementary school | To discover the favorite audiovisuals of a sample of 11–12 year old children. To learn what meaning and sense music has for them. | Correlational | Audiovisuals with or without music | Emotional bond | Selection of 14 sequences from the children’s favorite audiovisuals: film; cartoons series; documentary | Ad hoc questionnaires |
| Kawakami & Katahira [ | 84 | 11.9 | Elementary school | To investigate the emotional mechanisms that make people experience pleasant emotion when listening to sad music | Observational | Listening to two minor pieces considered sad by previous studies; Musical preference | Emotional state (among 50 emotions) | Granados’s Allegro | 50 emotion-related descriptive words and phrases on a 1 to 5 scale (ad hoc); Interpersonal Reactivity Index for children (Hasegawa et al., 2009) |
| Su et al. [ | 62 | 11 to 12 | Elementary school | To examine the effects of the Mozart piece K.448 on the learning anxiety, cognitive load, reading rates and reading comprehension of students for reading e-books | Cross-sectional within subjects; experimental (non-randomized sample) | Being exposed to background music (K.448) | Anxiety | Mozart’s piano concerto K.488 | Ad hoc reading comprehension tests, leaning anxiety scales from two previous studies (Venkatesh, 2000; He, Chang & Liu, 2010), and a scale of cognitive load (Ouyang et al., 2010) |
(B)
| Study | Main Findings | Statistics Significance | Main Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moore & Hanson-Abromeit [ | Teachers noted positive change in children’s | Not applicable | This was a feasibility study, so outcomes should be interpreted with caution due to the small sample size and lack of a comparison group. It should also be noted that this study was conducted with typically developing children at a single daycare site in the southeastern United States, further limiting generalization beyond this study sample. There is no comparison control to demine the efficacy of the MCRF intervention. |
| Boone & Cunningham [ | Overall, children as young as 4 and 5 years old were able to portray emotional meaning in music through expressive movement. More detailed analysis revealed that this ability was strongest for sad and happy segments and less developed for angry and fearful segments | Significant main effects were found for Age, | One potential criticism is that the accurate and identifiable portrayal of a music segment’s emotional meaning through a dance performance does not stipulate that the performer has cognitively “understood” the emotional message. |
| Brown & Sax [ | Whithin an arts-integrated program, children showed greater observed positive emotions, and greater growth in teacher-rated levels of positive and negative emotion regulation | Children’s display of positive emotions in arts classes ( | Results showing an advantage of the arts for children’s emotions and emotion regulation are specific to Settlement Music School’s Kaleidoscope Preschool Arts Enrichment Program, Then the results may not apply to programs that use the arts in other ways. |
| Habibi et al. [ | It was found no neural, cognitive, motor, emotional, or social differences among the three groups. In addition, there was no correlation between music perception skills and any of the social or emotional measures | Univariate ANOVA results for each behavioral outcome by group: | Gordon’s PMAA is a musical aptitude task |
| Ramdane et al. [ | The majority of the respondents agreed that music and singing help in developing teachers’ thinking skills and raise their emotional awareness | Not applicable | Results limited to Islam education and not generalizable to other educational contexts |
| Jeremic et al. [ | Increased social-emotional competencies of students in the experimental group (using the vocal performance teaching method) | Respondents who participated in the instruction carried out by the teacher of music culture showed a statistically significantly higher level of socio-emotional competencies ( | The limitations of the conducted study was the selection of the sample. Specifically, the results of the study would probably have been more valid if the sample had been random. |
| Nieminen et al. [ | School-aged children are able to make emotional and aesthetic judgments about unfamiliar musical pieces | The authors found significant correlations between preference and beauty ratings (r = 0.334, | The music stimuli and musical parameters used in this study were strictly controlled. For this reason this design does not necessarily allow to generalize the results. Moreover, additional refinements regarding the setup and careful modifications of the music material could be used to explore additional developmental aspects of music cognition and appreciation. |
| Schellenberg & Mankarious [ | The present findings documented a positive association betweenmusic training and performance on a test of emotional abilities inchildhood. Nevertheless, the link appeared to be a consequence ofhigh levels of cognitive functioning among the musically trainedchildren. | Compared with the untrained children ( | The vast majority of music training involved private one-on-one lessons, which require solitary practicing between lessons and have no social component other than playing for the instructor. Future research could examine in greater depth the role played by individual versus group lessons in the social-emotional abilities of musically trained children and adults, and whether improved emotional abilities are restricted to emotions conveyed in the auditory domain, or to tests that rely less on cognitive abilities. |
| Pimenta & Trevisan [ | An improvement was observed in the feelings experienced when attending these sessions and a new way of relating to the class, greater involvement and interest in it. | Not applicable | The size of the sample. The participating subjects were 31 students from a public school in Sao Paulo, so the results of this study can not be generalized |
| Rauduvaite [ | Integrating popular music, active (personal meaning and emotional imitation) methods of music education can be acceptable and efficient for junior school age children | Not applicable | The sample of the educational project included only 70 school learners |
| Kang [ | The combination of MI and sandplay was shown to have a positive effect on the improvement of children’s self-expression and emotions | Not applicable | Increase the total number of participants, it would be beneficial to select participants who have a similar developmental level and a proper gender ratio. It may be necessary to have different intervention methods according to the participants’ cognitive developmental levels. |
| Soulier [ | Results reveal a negative impact of negative emotional induction on grammatical spelling performances | The effect of the emotional induction factor is significant, (Positive = 33.74%, Negative = 49.58%, Neutral = 39.09%, | Limitations regarding emotional induction and measurement |
| Kim & Kim [ | The musical instrument performance program improved the ability to perceive emotions, and reduced physical and verbal aggression | There were statistically significant effects of group, | All participants were recruited from two elementary schools in Seoul, South Korea using a convenience sampling method. Thus, the participants are not representative of all elementary school children |
| Schellenberg et al. [ | Children in the music group had larger increases in sympathy and prosocial | For emotion comprehension, there was a stronger two-way interaction between testing time and initial performance, | The possibility that an unknown variable caused some of the improvements in social skills that were apparent to the children in the program cannot be ruled out. It is unknown whether non-musical group activities would have a similar effect on prosocial skills. It is also possible that the experimenter’s expectations play a role, with subtle but unintended cues leading children to respond in the desired way. Unfortunately, the music program was implemented in some schools, but not others, making it impossible for experimenters to be blind to group assignment. |
| Teske et al. [ | The use of upbeat music and laughing in the experimental condition produced positive mood, thereby facilitating creativity | Results indicated a significant difference with a very large effect size between cartoons made during the experimental condition lessons and cartoons made during the control condition lessons ( | The current study was limited because it considered the broad variable of elevated mood without separating the effects of upbeat music from simulated laughter. The different effects of upbeat and simulated music laughter could be determined by future experiments that examine these variables separately. |
| Venegas et al. [ | AudioGraphics generates higher levels of emotional satisfaction than dissatisfaction | There is no significant correlation between positive feelings and appreciation of music and sound (r: 0,201 | They do not present the results on the correlations between negative emotions (Rho Spearman) and musical evaluation |
| Tricard et al. [ | It was found a negative effect of sadness on the scores of correct answers to syllogisms compared to joy. Therefore, creating an atmosphere that favors a positive emotion will permit children to better use their cognitive competences | A significant effect of emotional state on performance in deductive reasoning is observed [H (2; | Limitations regarding emotional induction and measurement |
| Yun & Kim [ | The results showed that the Orff Approach has a positive effect on children’s self-expression, self-efficacy, and social skills | The Orf Approach was signifcant to the subject’s self-expression (Z = −3.92, | The experiment in this research was conducted for 16 sessions, once a week, and looked at the short-term changes and improvements in the children. |
| Katagiri [ | The findings suggest that background music can be an effective tool to increase emotional understanding in children with autism, which is crucial to their social interactions. | The repeated measures analysis revealed that there was a significant difference in understanding among the four emotions ( | The sample size, participants’ diverse ages and verbal abilities, and the time frame for treatment are all factors that may have contributed to the findings of the present study. The sample size was limited to 12 participants so that each counterbalanced treatment order group had only 3 participants. |
| Campayo et al. [ | Students who tend to see the positive side of things have higher self-esteem and self-confidence. Teaching with integrated students’ emotional work can improve their performance | Not applicable | This is a case study with three subjects, so its results are |
| Cook et al. [ | Prosocial emotions towards the social exclusion of a child with autism can be improved for NT children through positive music-based contact. Furthermore, their tendency to be a victim decreases. | Prosocial | Results from natural experiments are less likely to evidence causation, and |
| Lebaka [ | The gains observed include an improved concentration and attitude to schoolwork as well as the unlocking of creative talent | Not applicable | Closer investigation showed that the data on actual composition was difficult to obtain. The origin of these songs is not known. Further investigations should be conducted with regard to the collection, retention and transmission of traditional Pedi religious songs so as not to forever lose these important cultural treasures |
| Ho et al. [ | Participation in group drumming led to significant improvements in multiple domains of social-emotional | Results of the ANOVA Oppositional Defiant Problems (OD). ( | The effect sizes in the current study (η2 |
| Porta [ | The study shows that sound holds the children’s interest even when the image is removed. Furthermore, music has meaning for children in aspects related to emotions | Not applicable | The sample size. A research line will continue by adding further individual interpretations, in an attempt to extend our knowledge about the communicative, emotional and musical tendencies in childhood and preadolescence. |
| Kawakami & Katahira [ | Fantasy was directly associated with liking sad music. Additionally, perspective taking ability, was correlated with the emotional response to sad music. Furthermore, the experience of pleasant emotions contributed to liking sad music. | The authors found that liking sad music was significantly correlated with both Empathic Concern (EC) [ | First, this study used only sad music as experimental stimuli. It should be carefully assessed whether the relationships between trait empathy and responses to sad music shown in this study were unique to sad music. It is therefore necessary to examine the relationships between the sub-components of trait empathy and music preferences related to emotions other than sadness. Secondly, the developmental aspects of empathic ability might have influenced the results because only elementary school children took part. |
| Su et al. [ | This piece of Mozart’s music had positive effect in reducing learning anxiety, and improving the students’ reading rates, reading comprehension and direct process performance | The learning anxiety scores of both groups when Mozart was played were significantly higher than those seen for the silent task, and thus the students’ had lower learning anxiety when listening to this music: Group 1 ( | This study is based on data obtained using a subjective learning anxiety scale. In order to explore the related issues more objectively, one might consider using an EEG to measure students’ learning anxiety. |