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Journal Article
Review
Personalised music as a treatment for epilepsy.
Epilepsy & Behavior : E&B 2024 July
In this paper we look at non-pharmaceutical treatments for intractable epilepsy based on neurophysiological methods especially with EEG analysis. In summary, there are a number of limbic and thalamo-cortical related structures involved in the processing of musical emotion (exposure), including the amygdala (arousal, expression of mood, fear), hippocampus (memory, regulation of HPA axis, stress), parahippocampal gyrus (recognition, memory retrieval), insula (valence), temporal poles (connectivity), ventral striatum (expectation and experience of reward), orbitofrontal cortex (valence) and cingulate cortex (autonomic regulation). One method is to audify (a form of sonification) EEG activity to find music by feedback to entrain abnormal EEG activity. We discuss various methods and our use of X-System (https://www.x-system.co.uk/) which is a computational model of the musical brain capable of predicting the neurophysiological effects of music. It models structures and pathways related to responses to music, including the cochlea, brain stem, auditory and motor cortex, as well as basal ganglia, cerebellum and limbic structures. It can predict autonomic and endocrine activity as well as the substrates of electrical activity to select music which can regularise EEG abnormalities to decrease epileptic activity and seizures, especially in those unresponsive to antiepileptic medication or invasive treatments.
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