figshare
Browse
2059204319861719.pdf (323.21 kB)

An agenda for best practice research on group singing, health, and well-being

Download (323.21 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2020-05-07, 11:59 authored by Genevieve A. Dingle, Stephen Clift, Saoirse Finn, Rebekah Gilbert, Jenny M. Groarke, J. Yoon Irons, Alice Jones Bartoli, Alexandra Lamont, Jacques Launay, Eleanor S. Martin, Hilary MossHilary Moss, Katie Rose Sanfilippo, Matthew Shipton, Lauren Stewart, Samantha Talbot, Mark Tarrant, Liesbeth Tip, Elyse J. Williams
Research on choirs and other forms of group singing has been conducted for several decades and there has been a recent focus on the potential health and well-being benefits, particularly in amateur singers. Experimental, quantitative, and qualitative studies show evidence of a range of biopsychosocial and well-being benefits to singers; however, there are many challenges to rigor and replicability. To support the advances of research into group singing, the authors met and discussed theoretical and methodological issues to be addressed in future studies. The authors are from five countries and represent the following disciplinary perspectives: music psychology, music therapy, community music, clinical psychology, educational and developmental psychology, evolutionary psychology, health psychology, social psychology, and public health. This article summarizes our collective thoughts in relation to the priority questions for future group singing research, theoretical frameworks, potential solutions for design and ethical challenges, quantitative measures, qualitative methods, and whether there is scope for a benchmarking set of measures across singing projects. With eight key recommendations, the article sets an agenda for best practice research on group singing

History

Publication

Music and Science;2, pp. 1-15

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Note

peer-reviewed

Language

English

Usage metrics

    University of Limerick

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC