| Literature DB >> 35480560 |
Francesca Greco1,2, Elisa Grazioli1,2, Loretta Francesca Cosco1, Attilio Parisi2, Maurizio Bertollo3, Gian Pietro Emerenziani1.
Abstract
Music is made up of several features (e.g., melody and rhythm) and it accompanies our life in different daily activities. During the last years, there was a growing interest in research about the music-related effects in the exercise domain. Music stimuli could act as an ergogenic effect leading to improvements in health-related and physical fitness components like cardiorespiratory endurance and muscular fitness. Moreover, listening to music may positively affect individuals' psychological state which could lead to increased exercise adherence. Conflicting data exist regarding the effects of music on cardiorespiratory and muscle-strengthening exercises indicating that music's characteristics (i.e., rhythm and musicality), studied samples (i.e., athletes and amateur) and methodology (i.e., self-selected music and research-selected music) might influence the results. Listening to music while exercising is becoming more frequent also in recreationally active individuals. While literature mainly focused on the effects of music in elite and amateur athletes, little data are available regarding recreationally active participants. Therefore, this review aims to summarize evidence regarding the effects of music on health-related physical fitness components in recreationally active individuals, specifically referring to cardiorespiratory endurance and muscular fitness. These outcomes will be helpful to all recreationally active participants to optimize the exercise protocol with the use of music.Entities:
Keywords: Aerobic exercise; Music; Physical fitness; Strength training
Year: 2022 PMID: 35480560 PMCID: PMC9037123 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.13332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 3.061
Music in cardiorespiratory endurance and muscle-strengthening exercises: study’s characteristics.
| Study | Participants | Music conditions | Activity | Primary findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 18 males (22.45 ± 1.86 years) | NM; M | 15 min of moderate aerobic exercise on bicycle ergometer | Lower HR during exercise in Music than NM |
|
| 20 women and 15 men undergraduate active students (20.7 ± 2.3 years) | NM, NON-PREF; PREF | 12 min Cooper Test | Higher running performance in female listening to PREF |
|
| 200 healthy people (126 females, 74 males - 20.7 ± 4.4 years) | NM; NON-PREF (130 bpm); PREF (130 bpm) | 20 min activity at low | PREF small effect on exercise enjoyment |
|
| 30 male physical education college students (25.66 ± 3.89 years) | MOT; REL; NM | Treadmill running to exhaustion (80-85% of maximal HR) | Greatest aerobic performance with MOT; Lowest RPE and salivary cortisol levels with REL |
|
| 13 males | ST (55–65 bpm); FT (125–135 bpm); NM | Three exercise sessions of high-intensity intervals interspersed with a 3–10 min passive recovery period | Higher feeling Scale scores throughout recovery periods with FT |
|
| 35 Sport Science male students (22.63 ± 2.9 years) | ST (100 bpm); FT (140 bpm); NM | Bruce treadmill test with 72-h intervals | Greatest performance with FT; Lowest lactate concentration after recovery with ST |
|
| 19 physically active people (26.4 ± 2 years) | NM; LOW (90–110 bpm), MED (130–150 bpm), HIGH (170–190 bpm) | walking for 10 min at 6.5 km/h on a treadmill or Leg Press at 80% on 1-RM | Lower RPE during walking in LOW, MED and HIG groups |
|
| 12 well-trained resistance exercise males (24 ± 2 years) | WU+RE with music (130 bpm); WU+RE without music; WU with music+RE; WU without music+RE | Resistance exercises circuit | Higher RPE, HR, blood pressure in WU+RE without music condition |
|
| 10 resistance-trained males (21.6 ± 1.7 years) | PREF (>120 bpm); NON-PREF | Bench press resistance exercise (at 75% of 1-RM) | Greatest motivation and repetitions to failure with PREF |
|
| 12 resistance-trained college-aged males (20.5 ± 1.24 years) | PREF (127 ± 28 bpm); NON-PREF (126 ± 25 bpm) | Resistance exercise (bench press at 75% 1-RM) | Greatest repetitions, mean velocity, relative mean power, peak velocity, peak power and motivation with PREF |
|
| 31 resistance-trained men (26.6 ± 6.8 years) | SSM (>120 bpm); NM | Maximal bench strength (1-RM) and endurance (repetitions to failure at 60% 1-RM) | Greatest endurance performance with SSM |
|
| 20 resistance-trained men (22.95 ±1.90 years) | SSM; NM | Bench press strength-endurance (3 sets at 75% 1-RM) and squat jump (3 reps at 30% back squat 1-RM) | Greatest take-off velocity, rate of velocity development, and rate of force development with SSM in squat jump exercise; lower RPE with SSM in squat jump exercise; greatest fatigue, vigour and tension with SSM |
|
| 19 healthy adults (24.2 ± 4.9 years) | Music track (119 bpm); NM | Hand grip test | Greatest dissociative attention and upregulated affective arousal with music |
|
| 27 undergraduates sport science males (20.2 ± 1.7 years) | SSM (>120 bpm); white noise | Isometric weight-holding | Greatest endurance performance with SSM |
|
| 8 men and 7 women healthy college-aged students (20.1 ± 1.79 years) | SSM; NM | Bench press endurance (5 sets at 70% 1-RM) | Greatest endurance performance with SSM |
|
| 63 strength-trained young adults (25.0 ± 4.4 years) | FT (120 bpm); ST (90 bpm); NM | Wall-sit and plank-hold exercises | Longer dissociative state during wall-sit exercise with both FT and ST |
|
| 25 men (22.9 ± 2.8 years) and 25 women (24.0 ± 3.8 years) volunteer sport science undergraduates | STIM (134 bpm); SED (90 bpm); white noise | Hand grip test | Higher grip strength with STIM |
|
| 26 male students (23.92 ± 2.05 years) | SSM (>120 bpm); NM | Maximal bench press (1RM) and endurance (60% of 1RM) | Greatest endurance performance with SSM |
|
| 16 resistance-trained males (22.0 ± 3.4 years) | SSM (129 ± 9 bpm); electronic dance music (128 ± 1 bpm); metal (159 ± 24 bpm); NM | Power based (30% 1-RM) and strength-based (60%, 70% and 80% 1-RM) repetition to failure exercise protocol in the bench press and back squat exercises | Repetitions to failure increased by a small to moderate amount for all music conditions at low but not high intensities; increased vigour in all music conditions |
|
| Undergraduate students (33 males and 16 females) | STIM; SED; NM | Hand grip test | Reduced grip strength with SED |
|
| 20 young undergraduate students (20.0 ± 1.4 years) | PMG; NPM; NM | Hand grip test; lat-pulldown strength-endurance (75% of 1-RM) | Greatest grip strength and endurance performance with PMG; Greatest RPE with NM |
|
| 153 healthy community dwelling people (73.0 ± 6 years) | PREF; most disliked music; NM | Hand grip test | Greatest grip strength with PREF |
Note:
FT, fast-tempo; HR, heart rate; M, music according to the International Organization For Standardization MOT, motivational music; NM, no music; NON-PREF, non-preferred music; NPMG, non-preferred music genre; PMG, preferred music genre; PREF, preferred music; RE, resistance exercise; REL, relaxation music; RPE, rate of perceived exertion; STIM, stimulative music; SED, sedative music; SSM, self-selected music; ST, slow-tempo; WU, warm-up.