Music listening near bedtime disruptive to sleep
Baylor
University
Most
people listen to music throughout their day and often near bedtime to wind
down. But can that actually cause your sleep to suffer? The #1 cause
When sleep researcher Michael Scullin, Ph.D., associate professor of psychology and neuroscience at Baylor University, realized he was waking in the middle of the night with a song stuck in his head, he saw an opportunity to study how music -- and particularly stuck songs -- might affect sleep patterns.
Scullin's recent study, published in Psychological Science, investigated the relationship between music listening and sleep, focusing on a rarely-explored mechanism: involuntary musical imagery, or "earworms," when a song or tune replays over and over in a person's mind.
These commonly happen while awake, but Scullin found that they also can
happen while trying to sleep.
"Our brains continue to process music even when none is playing, including apparently while we are asleep," Scullin said. "Everyone knows that music listening feels good. Adolescents and young adults routinely listen to music near bedtime. But sometimes you can have too much of a good thing. The more you listen to music, the more likely you are to catch an earworm that won't go away at bedtime. When that happens, chances are your sleep is going to suffer."
People
who experience earworms regularly at night -- one or more times per week -- are
six times as likely to have poor sleep quality compared to people who rarely
experience earworms. Surprisingly, the study found that some instrumental music
is more likely to lead to earworms and disrupt sleep quality than lyrical
music.
The
study involved a survey and a laboratory experiment. The survey involved 209
participants who completed a series of surveys on sleep quality, music
listening habits and earworm frequency, including how often they experienced an
earworm while trying to fall asleep, waking up in the middle of the night and
immediately upon waking in the morning.
In
the experimental study, 50 participants were brought into Scullin's Sleep
Neuroscience and Cognition Laboratory at Baylor, where the research team
attempted to induce earworms to determine how it affected sleep quality.
Polysomnography -- a comprehensive test and the gold standard measurement for
sleep -- was used to record the participants' brain waves, heart rate,
breathing and more while they slept.
"Before bedtime, we played three popular and catchy songs -- Taylor Swift's 'Shake It Off,' Carly Rae Jepsen's 'Call Me Maybe' and Journey's 'Don't Stop Believin'," Scullin said. "We randomly assigned participants to listen to the original versions of those songs or the de-lyricized instrumental versions of the songs.
Participants responded whether and when they experienced
an earworm. Then we analyzed whether that impacted their nighttime sleep
physiology. People who caught an earworm had greater difficulty falling asleep,
more nighttime awakenings, and spent more time in light stages of sleep."
Additionally,
EEG readings -- records of electrical activity in the brain -- from the
experimental study were quantitatively analyzed to examine physiological
markers of sleep-dependent memory consolidation. Memory consolidation is the
process by which temporary memories are spontaneously reactived during sleep
and transformed into a more long-term form.
"We
thought that people would have earworms at bedtime when they were trying to
fall asleep, but we certainly didn't know that people would report regularly
waking up from sleep with an earworm. But we saw that in both the survey and
experimental study," he said.
Participants
who had a sleep earworm showed more slow oscillations during sleep, a marker of
memory reactivation. The increase in slow oscillations was dominant over the
region corresponding to the primary auditory cortex which is implicated in
earworm processing when people are awake.
"Almost
everyone thought music improves their sleep, but we found those who listened to
more music slept worse," Scullin said. "What was really surprising
was that instrumental music led to worse sleep quality -- instrumental music
leads to about twice as many earworms."
The study found that individuals with greater music listening habits experienced persistent earworms and a decline in sleep quality. These results are contrary to the idea of music as a hypnotic that might help sleep.
Health organizations
commonly recommend listening to quiet music before bedtime -- recommendations
that largely arise from self-reported studies. Instead, Scullin has objectively
measured that the sleeping brain continues to process music for several hours,
even after the music stops.
Knowing
that earworms negatively affect sleep, Scullin recommends first trying to
moderate music listening or taking occasional breaks if bothered by earworms.
Timing of music also is important -- try to avoid it before bed.
"If
you commonly pair listening to music while being in bed, then you'll have that
association where being in that context might trigger an earworm even when
you're not listening to music, such as when you're trying to fall asleep,"
he said.
Another way to get rid of an earworm is to engage in cognitive activity -- fully focusing on a task, problem or activity helps to distract your brain from earworms.
Near bedtime, rather than engaging in a demanding activity or something that would disrupt your sleep, like watching TV or playing video games, Scullin suggests spending five to 10 minutes writing out a to-do list and putting thoughts to paper.
A previous study by Scullin -- partially funded
by a National Institutes of Health grant and the Sleep Research Society
Foundation -- found that participants who took five minutes to write down
upcoming tasks before bed helped "offload" those worrying thoughts
about the future and led to faster sleep.