FRIDAY, June 11 (HealthDay News) -- Training performers to use
biofeedback techniques to control their stage fright can dramatically
reduce anxiety while improving overall performance, new research
indicates.
The finding suggests that artists may have another weapon in their
arsenal -- besides traditional interventions, such as prescription beta
blockers and aerobic exercise -- to combat the potentially crippling
effects of this condition.
Reported in the spring issue of Biofeedback, the current
investigation into stage fright treatment was led by Myron R. Thurber of
Neurotherapy Northwest in Spokane Valley, Wash., in collaboration with
scientists from the University of North Texas in Denton, Texas.
The authors noted in a news release from the publisher that more than
70 percent of musicians may suffer from a severe form of high anxiety
stage fright called "musical performance anxiety."
Thurber and his associates assessed a group of university-student
musicians while performing in front of an audience.
Afterwards, the participants engaged in four 30- to 50-minute
educational sessions to learn how to control their heart rhythm while
focusing their thoughts and emotions. An inexpensive biofeedback device
enabled them to monitor their progress.
Biofeedback aims to improve emotional stability, efficiency and clarity
by training users to exert a calming influence over the neuronal and
hormonal communication process that is constantly under way between the
brain and the heart.
Following training, all the musicians performed again. The research
team found that performance anxiety levels dropped 71 percent, while
overall performance improved by 62 percent.
What's more, the musicians said they were able to apply their newly
acquired biofeedback skills to other aspects of their lives to reduce
stress, increase calmness, improve anger management, feel more relaxed and
get better sleep.
More information
For more on biofeedback, visit the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
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