Music therapy

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    Mcbride English 112 13 December, 2017 Positive effects of music therapy Music therapy has been a healing ritual long before recorded history. The word music derives from the muses in greek mythology. The muses were leaders of music, medicine, poetry, and the arts, some of which include, Apollo, Socrates, and Aristotle. Historical texts such as the Bible and Homers Odyssey have also referenced the therapeutic value in music therapy. “In the Bible, Sauls melancholy disappeared while David played

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    Music: Not Just for Fun If you could help your grandma with dementia get better and be able to better communicate with you, would you? What if you could help that little kid in the park with autism be more social and make more friends? Would you find a cure for your best friend that has been recently diagnosed with a crippling depression if possible? Well, using music therapy may now be an option for treatment to all of that. Recently, qualified therapists and scientists have, through studies and

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    Music is an aspect of our day-to-day lives. We listen to it either on the radio while getting ready for work, through the iPod while working out, at the restaurant or at a weekend party. It has the power to evoke different emotions, whether sad or happy, depending on the type that we listen to. Music therapy is a healing tool used by professional therapists to treat emotional, social or physical conditions. It involves assessment of the individual's situation by observing their response on different

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    Research Paper Final Essay: Music Therapy Have you ever felt so good that you just want to sing? Or on the contrary, have you ever felt so bereaved that crying a river to Julie London’s “Cry Me a River” is the only therapy you can give yourself? Either way, the way in which music evokes our deepest and most meaningful feelings is a truly beautiful element of life’s essence, and many therapists and psychologists around the world are now using music to help solve their patient’s physical and

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    Music have strong influences on individuals, some effects have more visibility and exposures, while other effects remain largely unknown. Individuals have utilized music to relax and to appreciate aesthetics, while other individuals have used music to regulate mood and to express oneself (Morrison). The more unfamiliar effects and uses of music have expanded; contemporary researches have discovered how music enhances concentration and cognitive functions, a primary reason why therapists increasingly

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    Music therapy is a special therapeutic that does not require verbal abilities or social interaction. Through research, scientist have tested and proven that music therapy increases the response of social interactions, motor- skills and speech naturally in autistic children. Although many people feel that music therapist are bias and have no control of an autistic child’s brain, music therapy has proven to guide autistic children through various modalities and auditory processing. Therefore, music

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    Myriah Street Elizabeth Crews En101 February 9,2017 Music Therapy: What it is exactly This article helps explain and break down exactly what music therapy is. Music therapy is a gentle, and effective form of actual therapy. Music therapy helps those in need of help mentally, physically, and emotionally. Whether the patient was domestically abused, raped, witnessed a tragedy, or anything. Therapists believe that music can help and solve anything. The article exclaims its importance to those who

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    Advocating Music Therapy: Where it is and Where it Should Be Music therapy is not a person with Alzheimer’s listening to his or her favorite songs on an iPod with headphones; however, music therapy is the clinical and evidence-based use of music to improve physical, emotional, cognitive, and social needs. Music therapy is only advocated in three states: North Dakota, Nevada, and Georgia. Because not many understand the value of music therapy, it is not advocated in many other states. The goals and

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    Mrs. Moore English IV 16 March 2016 Is Music Therapy Effective in Mental Disorders? Music therapy serves as an alternative therapy to help many people with mental disorders, such as autism. Autism, a disorder that interferes with communication and cognitive development in the brain. Thus, music therapy aids in medical treatment, for example, using music therapy to overcome communication barriers in some patients. As an alternative therapy, it sometimes negatively impacts some spectrum

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    Music is a combination of melody and rhythm, it has physiological, psychological and social functional impacts on human body. In the physical level, music can stimulates the body 's autonomic nervous system, which is to regulate the heart rate, breathing rate, nerve conduction, blood pressure and endocrine. In the psychological level, music can cause human brain which is in charge of emotions and feelings do autonomic response, hence change the mood and release the anxiety. In fact, human body has

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