Abstract

Both music and dance training can be conceptualised as mindfulness-like practices due to their focus on the present moment. Mindfulness and music are associated with mental health. However, evidence from dance practice, especially among ballet students, shows an association with mental health problems. Psychological inflexibility involves cognitive fusion, which is an excessive involvement with internal events, leading to experiential avoidance. Since studies analysing these concepts are scarce in music and dance practice, we intended to examine their effects in young music and ballet students. This study involved 113 participants (9 to 16 years old), 64.4% girls, 34.5% with musical training, 29.2% with ballet training, and 36.3% with no training. All participants completed the Child and Adolescent Mindfulness Measure (CAMM) and the Avoidance and Fusion Questionnaire for Youth (AFQ-Y). AFQ-Y scores correlated with months of ballet training. Ballet students had greater psychological inflexibility than music students and students without any training. CAMM scores did not correlate with months of any practice, and did not distinguish between groups of practitioners. These data confirm prior findings that practice of ballet can have a potential impact on mental health by showing that young ballet students exhibit greater psychological inflexibility.

Highlights

  • Not surprisingly, learning to play an instrument is connected to brain maturation benefits

  • Brain imaging and behavioural evidence led us to conjecture that mindfulness should be different when comparing musicians and dancers with non-practitioners

  • Because those with higher mindfulness skills have lower psychological inflexibility, we supposed that musicians, dancers, and non-dancers/non-musicians should be different in this adaptive regulation process

Read more

Summary

Participants

The total sample consisted of 113 Portuguese children and adolescents, 35.4% boys and 64.6% girls These young people were aged between 9 and 16 years old (mean age = 11.68, SD = 1.92), with a mean of 6.16 years of education (SD = 1.66). We employed the validated and translated version of CAMM for the Portuguese population (Cunha, Galhardo, & Pinto-Gouveia, 2013). This self-report measure contains a total of ten items in a Likert scale with five answer possibilities, ranging from 0 (never true) to 4 (always true), which are reverse scored.

Procedures
Statistical procedure
Results
Discussion
Limitations
Concluding remarks
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call