2020
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.564736
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

High-Performing Young Musicians’ Playing-Related Pain. Results of a Large-Scale Study

Abstract: The present study examines the prevalence, localization, frequency, and intensity of playing-related pain (PRP) in a sample of high-performing young musicians. We also address coping behavior and communication about PRP between young musicians, teachers, parents, and other people, such as friends. The aim is to provide information on PRP among high-performing musicians in childhood and adolescence, which can serve as a basis for music education, practice, and prevention in the context of instrumental teaching … Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
3
2

Citation Types

1
14
0
1

Year Published

2021
2021
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
6
2

Relationship

1
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 22 publications
(16 citation statements)
references
References 32 publications
1
14
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…Students enrolled in performance programs self-assessed their knowledge about health risks and protective behaviors as better than their fellow students enrolled in education training. This difference underlines that performance majors, who also practiced on average about 1,5 h more per day, may have already encountered health problems and are, thus, more aware of the risks for musicians ( Gembris et al, 2020 ). Furthermore, their peers might more frequently address preventive measures, warm-ups, and practice techniques.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Students enrolled in performance programs self-assessed their knowledge about health risks and protective behaviors as better than their fellow students enrolled in education training. This difference underlines that performance majors, who also practiced on average about 1,5 h more per day, may have already encountered health problems and are, thus, more aware of the risks for musicians ( Gembris et al, 2020 ). Furthermore, their peers might more frequently address preventive measures, warm-ups, and practice techniques.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…On the one hand, these findings underline the concern students show about their health from an early point in their education on, on the other hand, these findings point to the importance of considering different needs of different majors when teaching music students techniques and measures to maintain their health. It should be mentioned, that 30% of adolescent high performing musicians suffering from injury or playing-related pain feel not taken seriously by their instrumental teachers ( Gembris et al, 2020 ). Concerning university students, our assumption that performance majors and music education majors differ regarding the aspects under investigation was only supported regarding self-assessed knowledge about health risks and health protective measures for musicians, the average daily practicing hours, and abilities to cope with performance anxiety.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research dedicated to the latter group reports some of the highest levels of task-specific health problems ( Fry, 1986 ; Dawson, 2001 ; Berque and Gray, 2002 ; Aki and Yakut, 2003 ; Vinci et al, 2015 ; Kochem and Silva, 2017 ). Contributing co-factors may be one-sided posture and movement patterns when acquiring the necessary skills ( Ericsson et al, 1993 ; Mornell, 2009 ; Ranelli et al, 2011 ; Gembris et al, 2020 ), but also the realities of professional activity encountered later on when performing and teaching ( Spahn et al, 2014 ; Steinmetz, 2016 ; Smithson et al, 2017 ; Rensing et al, 2018 ; Schemmann et al, 2018 ; Gembris et al, 2020 ; Zaza and Farewell, 2001 ). The prevention of task-specific health problems in musicians has been receiving increased attention, with a growing number of initiatives offering musicians concepts on how to safeguard their health at various stages of their career ( Spahn et al, 2001 ; Hildebrandt and Nübling, 2004 ; Hildebrandt, 2009 , 2017 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The number of studies dedicated to electromyographic (EMG) measurements of violinists is growing. They examine a broad spectrum of relevant aspects, such as the influence of ergonomics, anthropometrics, and repertoire ( Philipson et al, 1990 ; Cattarello et al, 2017 , 2018 ; Kok et al, 2019 ; Chi et al, 2020 ; Mann et al, 2021 ), the comparison between muscle activation levels in healthy violinists and those reporting task-specific health problems ( Spahn et al, 2001 ; Berque and Gray, 2002 ; Fjellman-Wiklund et al, 2004 ; Hildebrandt and Nübling, 2004 ; Moore et al, 2008 ; McCray et al, 2016 ), muscular variability, endurance and fatigue aspects of violin performance ( Shan et al, 2004 ; Wagner, 2005 ; Gembris et al, 2020 ; Rousseau et al, 2020 ). In contrast, research comparing subjectively perceived effort levels and objective data on muscle activation when playing the violin appears to be scarcer ( Chan et al, 2000 ; Hildebrandt et al, 2021 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Five-Factor Model , also known as the “Big Five,” the “Five Factor Model,” or the “OCEAN model,” is the dominant model of personality ( McCrae, 2009 ). Its five traits are “openness,” “conscientiousness,” “extraversion,” “agreeableness,” and “neuroticism.” In the context of music, personality has been shown to correlate with music preferences ( Rentfrow and Gosling, 2003 , 2006 ; Schäfer and Mehlhorn, 2017 ; Ruth and Müllensiefen, 2020 ), affect modulation strategies ( von Georgi et al, 2006 ; von Georgi, 2013 ), creativity ( da Costa et al, 2015 ), creative achievement in the arts ( Harris et al, 2019 ), music taxonomy preferences ( Ferwerda et al, 2019 ), the experience of flow ( Heller et al, 2015 ), performance anxiety ( Bullerjahn et al, 2020 ), and playing related pain ( Gembris et al, 2020 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%