Overview
This study aims to explore whether listening to music intentionally can support the mental health of people recovering from a stroke. The question the investigators aim to answer is: Can intentional music listening improve emotional well-being in stroke survivors? And if so, what kinds of changes might music listening induce in mental health, thinking and memory (cognition), and brain activity? Participants will be randomly assigned to listen to either music or an audiobook for one hour each day, at home, for four weeks. Participants will also attend four in-person sessions with the researchers: at the start of the study (baseline), just before the listening period begins, after the four weeks are complete, and at a follow-up. During these visits, researchers will gather information about participants' mood and mental health (via questionnaires), assess memory and attention (via cognitive tasks), and use MRI scans to look at brain activity.
Description
This is a feasibility clinical trial of a remotely delivered music listening intervention for individuals with chronic stroke, incorporating objective tracking of music exposure and multimodal assessments of mental health, cognitive, neural, and physiological changes.
Specifically, this is a parallel-group randomized controlled feasibility trial enrolling patients with chronic stroke. Participants will be randomized to either an intentional music listening (IML) group or an active control group that listens to audiobooks. The study includes a 4-week pre-intervention period during which no treatment is administered; this phase is designed to assess the stability of outcome measures. Following this, participants will engage in 1-hour daily listening sessions over a 4-week intervention period. All listening activity (i.e., track identity, duration, and engagement) will be continuously tracked using custom open-source software, providing a measure of treatment dose. Behavioral outcomes related to mental health will be assessed at baseline, pre-intervention, post-intervention, and 3-month follow-up. Multimodal biomarkers (functional and structural MRI, electrodermal activity, and heart rate) will be collected pre- and post-intervention. The primary objective is to establish feasibility, defined by rates of retention and adherence, fidelity, feasibility, acceptability, and burden. Secondary outcomes include recruitment and randomization rates. This trial will provide essential data to inform the design of future large-scale clinical studies of IML for post-stroke mental health recovery.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Participants aged 50 to 90
- Confirmed diagnosis of ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke occurring at least six months prior to enrollment.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Significant hearing loss, defined by a score \>26 on the Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly Screening (HHIE-S; Ventry and Weinstein, 1982)
- Contraindications for MRI
- Significant cognitive impairment, defined as a Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA; Nasreddine et al., 2005) score below 22 (unless the lower score is attributable to expressive aphasia)
- Specific musical anhedonia, defined as a score below 60 on the Barcelona Music Reward Questionnaire (BMRQ; Mas-Herrero et al., 2013)
- Amusia, defined as a score below 70% on the Montreal Battery of Evaluation of Amusia (MBEA; Peretz et al., 2003).
- Participants will not be excluded if currently taking medications that may affect brain function (e.g., antidepressants) or if engaged in other complementary therapies (e.g., mindfulness, yoga). Participants will be allowed to initiate new medications or therapies during the study period.


