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Child Psychiatrist /Adult Psychiatrist

Writer's pictureVilash Reddy, MD

Higher-Speed Traffic Noise May Up Stress, Anxiety

TOPLINE:


Listening to recordings of natural soundscapes may help reduce anxiety and stress, but adding in high-traffic noise can mask the potential benefit, new research shows.


Traffic Noise

METHODOLOGY:


  • Researchers enrolled 68 adults (ages 18-42 years) from the University of the West of England Psychology participant pool.

  • Three 3-minute soundscape files were used: A natural soundscape with bird songs and two mixed soundscapes combining natural sounds with traffic noise recorded at speed limits of 20 mi/h or 40 mi/h.

  • Each participant was exposed to three rounds of a stressor video for 1 minute and a soundscape playback of 3 minutes, then answered questions after each exposure.

  • Subjective stress and pleasure scores (hedonic tone) were measured using the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology Mood Adjective Checklist, and anxiety was measured using the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory scale.


TAKEAWAY:


  • Natural soundscapes were strongly associated with the lowest levels of anxiety and stress, whereas mixed soundscapes with 40 mi/h traffic noise were associated with the highest stress (P < .01) and anxiety (P < .001) levels.

  • Higher pleasure scores occurred after exposure to natural soundscapes, but these scores decreased when the natural soundscapes were combined with 40 mi/h traffic noise.

  • Traffic noise masked the positive impact of a natural soundscape on stress and anxiety in participants irrespective of age, sex, or a predisposed preference for natural environments.


IN PRACTICE:


"Our study shows that listening to natural soundscapes can reduce stress and anxiety, and that anthropogenic sounds such as traffic noise can mask potential positive impacts," the investigators said in a press release. “Reducing traffic speeds in cities is therefore an important step toward more people experiencing the positive effects of nature on their health and well-being,” they added.


Note: This article originally appeared on Medscape.

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