Development and validation of the German Performance-related Questionnaire for Musicians (PQM) for measuring situational music performance anxiety. [PDF]
Spahn C, Nusseck M.
europepmc +1 more source
Unsettling the Audience: Affective 'dis-ease' and the Politics of Fear and Anxiety in Contemporary Performance [PDF]
Duggan, Patrick
core +2 more sources
Violence in the vicinity: the mental health impacts of nearby crime
Abstract Crime leads to a range of adverse outcomes for those who live nearby, and a common hypothesis is that this relationship is mediated by mental health. However, little is known about how the mental health of local residents is affected when an incident of violent crime occurs in their vicinity.
Panka Bencsik +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Perceived memory reliability and music performance anxiety in Chinese musicians: a mediation and latent profile approach. [PDF]
Li J, Luo Y, Wu Z, Huang L, Sun J.
europepmc +1 more source
Psychotherapeutic Treatment of Attachment Trauma in Musicians with Severe Music Performance Anxiety. [PDF]
Kenny D.
europepmc +1 more source
Impact of music performance anxiety on cardiovascular blood pressure responses, autonomic tone and baroreceptor sensitivity to a western classical music piano-concert. [PDF]
Moreno-Gutiérrez JÁ +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
The impact of art attendance and participation on health and wellbeing:systematic literature review (work package 1) [PDF]
Jindal-Snape, Divya +3 more
core +1 more source
Abstract Germany is a corporate environment that is sceptical towards digitalization and work‐from‐home, and in which it is customary to separate professional and personal spheres of life. The COVID‐19 pandemic, and ensuing government‐mandated shutdowns, changed all that by inducing extensive work‐from‐home conditions for most of the white collared ...
Jasmin Mahadevan +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Racial Imposter Syndrome and Music Performance Anxiety: A Case Study. [PDF]
Fraser T.
europepmc +1 more source
IN PURSUIT OF THE HOFFMANNESQUE
ABSTRACT This article seeks to elucidate the term ‘Hoffmannesque’ — the eponymous adjective that refers to E. T. A. Hoffmann — through recourse to Hoffmann's own use of ‘esque’ words: arabesque, grotesque, burlesque, picturesque. By investigating the characteristics of ‘esque’ formulations and tracing their recurrence through Hoffmann's texts, I argue ...
Polly Dickson
wiley +1 more source

