That music can serve more than purely aesthetic or entertainment purposes is no longer a surprising idea. Across many cultures and historical periods, music has functioned as a means of regulating mood, attention, and bodily states. Over the past decades, clinical research has begun to examine these effects with greater methodological care. Within psychiatry and psychology, music-based interventions now appear in studies addressing anxiety disorders, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and related conditions.

Structured musical interventions - such as guided listening, improvisation-based music therapy, or therapist-led sessions - can reduce obsessive symptoms, lower anxiety, and ease depressive comorbidity when used alongside established forms of treatment. Controlled studies report measurable improvements in anxiety and obsessive symptoms when music therapy accompanies standard care. At the same time, sample sizes remain limited, and further research is required.

Music also relates to cognitive and emotional mechanisms that are relevant to OCD. Studies indicate that individuals with obsessive-compulsive personality traits often show heightened sensitivity to musical tension and a strong preference for harmonic resolution. These observations suggest links between musical structure, predictive processing in the brain, and the regulation of intrusive thoughts.

The intersection of neuroscience, psychology, and musical practice therefore forms a productive field of investigation. Musical processes operate simultaneously on several levels: rhythm can synchronize breathing and autonomic activity, tonal expectation structures attention, and deep musical immersion alters the subjective experience of time as well as aspects of cognitive control. These characteristics make music a complex medium within therapeutic contexts.

I examined these questions in greater detail last year, focusing on anxiety disorders and obsessive-compulsive conditions, the current evidence base, and practical forms of music-based interventions in clinical settings.

Read the full essay:
https://tomkolbe.com/2025/08/25/music-based-interventions-for-anxiety-obsessive-compulsive-and-related-disorders-effects-applications-and-evidence/

#MusicTherapy #MusicAndMentalHealth #Neuroscience #Psychology #OCD #AnxietyResearch #MusicAndTheBrain #MusicResearch #MusicAndHealth

Music-Based Interventions for Anxiety, Obsessive-Compulsive, and Related Disorders: Effects, Applications, and Evidence – Thomas Alexander Kolbe

Music is more than entertainment. In clinical and non-clinical work with anxiety, obsessive-compulsive, trauma- and stressor-related, and somatic symptom disord

Thomas Alexander Kolbe
Study suggests that depression and anxiety can spread between married couples through shared mouth bacteria or kissing 💑🦠. Bacteria linked to depression, anxiety, and sleep problems became more abundant in both partners. Scientists believe they affect the brain by compromising the blood-brain barrier. 🧠💔

Read Full Article

#MentalHealth #CouplesWellness #BacteriaAndBrain #DepressionAwareness #AnxietyResearch https://www.hindustantimes.com/lifestyle/health/if-your-partner-has-depression-anxiety-you-could-catch-it-by-kissing-them-says-new-study-101748059706402-amp.html
Reenviado desde Science News
(https://t.me/experienciainterdimensional/9286)
If your partner has depression, anxiety you could ‘catch’ it by kissing them, says new study

A new research states that depression and anxiety can spread between married couples through shared mouth bacteria or kissing.  | Health

Hindustan Times

Think your anxiety self-assessment is accurate? Science says there's only a 50/50 chance. New research reveals the shocking truth gap between how we perceive our own anxiety and what professionals diagnose.

#MentalHealth #AnxietyResearch

https://hecknews.com/insights/anxiety-self-assessment-accuracy-study-reveals-troubling-gap/

Your Anxiety Quiz Is Probably Wrong Half the Time, Science Confirms

That online anxiety quiz you just took? It might as well be a coin flip. Recent studies reveal anxiety self-assessment tools fail to detect actual anxiety disorders nearly half the time…

HeckNews
🚨 The latest "scientific breakthrough" involves a protein that multitasks as both an infection fighter and your brain's anxiety switch. 🤯 Meanwhile, the article itself does a fantastic job of offering zero information, assuming you can even get past its security blockade. 🙄🔒
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2025-04-scientists-protein-il-infection-brain.html #scientificbreakthrough #multitaskingprotein #anxietyresearch #securityissues #informationoverload #HackerNews #ngated
Scientists discover the protein IL-17 that fights infection also acts on the brain, inducing anxiety or sociability

Immune molecules called cytokines play important roles in the body's defense against infection, helping to control inflammation and coordinating the responses of other immune cells. A growing body of evidence suggests that some of these molecules also influence the brain, leading to behavioral changes during illness.

Medical Xpress