Category Archives: Medicine and health

Adaptive digital instruments and disability

The creation, distribution, and deployment of the Adaptive Use Musical Instrument (AUMI) software represents a project that redefines our understanding of music—its creation, its meaning, and who can make it. AUMI also serves as a broader invitation to embrace innovative thinking beyond the realm of music, challenging traditional notions of normativity, difference, and democratic social relations. The existence of AUMI and the new social dynamics it encourages underscore the significant influence of disability rights and justice advocates, highlighting their impact across diverse social and cultural spheres.

As a digital instrument available for free download, AUMI fosters democratic access to music making. It allows individuals who were previously excluded from composing and performing music to generate a wide range of sounds by controlling a visual cursor through eye, head, hand, and body gestures. AUMI’s technology can track even the smallest body movements, such as eye or chest movements from breathing, enabling users with limited voluntary mobility to create notes, chords, rhythms, and melodies using an apparatus that registers the slightest degrees of motion. When programmed to reduce sensitivity to motion, AUMI supports music composition and performance by individuals with active involuntary movements. This adaptability has significant implications for disability and social justice, highlighting its broader impact on inclusivity and access.

A demonstration video of AUMI.

By overcoming the limitations of outdated technologies and conventions, AUMI creates new opportunities for a diverse range of individuals to engage in music-making. It paves the way for the creation of innovative musical sounds and fosters new social connections among musicians. In doing so, AUMI frees artistic expression from the physical and social constraints that have defined Western art music, allowing for creativity beyond conventional norms.

Instead of perceiving disability as an embarrassing impairment or a deficiency to be fixed or reluctantly accommodated, the disability rights movement embraces the value and potential difference. It draws attention to the harm caused not just to individuals, but to society, by narrow definitions of normalcy and normativity. Disability activism reveals how framing able-bodiedness as the standard leads to artificial, arbitrary, and irrational exclusions that misallocate resources, waste talents, and stifle creativity, invention, and innovation.

This according to “AUMI as a model for social justice” by George Lipsitz, Improvising across abilities: Pauline Oliveros and the Adaptive Use Musical Instrument, ed. by Thomas Ciufo, Abbey L. Dvorak, Kip Haaheim, et al. (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2024, 47–63; RILM Abstracts of Music Literature, 2024-9475).

Today is the International Day of Persons with Disabilities.

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Filed under Instruments, Medicine and health, Science, Therapy

Emotionality, music, and mental health

Recent research on personality indicates that trait negative emotionality, often referred to as neuroticism, is linked to how young people use music for emotional regulation. This suggests that those with higher levels of neuroticism may turn to music as a way to manage their emotions. However, the emotional factors that connect neuroticism, musical emotion regulation, and mental health remain unclear. Investigating both adaptive and maladaptive forms of musical emotion regulation has revealed potential strategies to mitigate the adverse effects of neuroticism on internalizing symptoms, such as depression and anxiety, in youth.

A study involving 1,137 college undergraduate students aged 17 to 21 identified four forms of emotion regulation related to music listening—rumination, discharging negative emotions, avoidant coping, and a preference for sad music—that may mediate the impact of neuroticism on internalizing symptoms. These findings remained robust even after controlling for general (non-musical) emotion regulation and coping strategies. Overall, the research integrates four complementary perspectives on neuroticism and musical emotion regulation: deductive (from mainstream psychology), inductive (from music psychology), musical coping with stress, and negative trait-congruence (the idea that a preference for sad music reflects negative emotionality). The study also highlighted the potential link between neuroticism and problematic musical emotion regulation strategies, which are often associated with symptoms of depression and anxiety in young people.

This according to “Neuroticism, musical emotion regulation, and mental health” by Dave Miranda (Psychomusicology: Music, mind and brain 31/2 [2021] 59–73; RILM Abstracts of Music Literature, 2021-8687).

October 10 is World Mental Health Day.

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