Music and suicidality: A study on associations between music preferences and risk factors of suicide

Auteurs

Benedikt Till, Ulrich S Tran, Martin Voracek, Thomas Niederkrotenthaler.

Résumé

In recent years, the question whether personal suicidality is reflected in individual music preferences has been discussed. We assessed associations of preferred music genres and cumulative exposure to and rating of 50 preselected songs, including 25 suicide-related songs, with suicide risk factors in an online survey with 943 participants. Preferences for sad music were associated with high psychoticism, while fanship of music genres with predominantly joyful contents was linked to low psychoticism. There was a dose-response relationship of positive rating of suicide songs with high life satisfaction and low hopelessness. Music preferences partly reflect suicide risk factors, but enjoyment of suicide songs is negatively associated with risk factors of suicide, which may indicate a psychological defense mechanism against suicidal impulses. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved) *Music *Preferences *Risk Factors *Suicide Psychoticism


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