2337 lines
161 KiB
Markdown
2337 lines
161 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Dance and stress regulation: A multidisciplinary narrative review
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author: Sandra Klaperski-van der Wal
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created: 2025-03-06
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converted: 2026-02-23 16:05:14
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source: PsychologyofSport&Exercise.pdf
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---
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# Dance and stress regulation: A multidisciplinary narrative review
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## Page 1
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Review
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Dance and stress regulation: A multidisciplinary narrative review
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Sandra Klaperski-van der Wal
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a , b , *
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, Jonathan Skinner
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b , c
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, Jolanta Opacka-Juffry
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b
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,
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Kristina Pfeffer
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d , e
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a
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Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University, Thomas van Aquinostraat 4, 6525 GD, Nijmegen, the Netherlands
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b
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School of Life & Health Sciences, University of Roehampton, Holybourne Avenue, SW15 4JD, London, United Kingdom
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c
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Surrey Business School, University of Surrey, GU2 7XH, United Kingdom
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d
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Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark
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e
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DRIVEN- Danish Centre for Motivation and Behaviour Science, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark
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ARTICLE INFO
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Keywords:
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Stress
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Health
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Dance
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Exercise
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Neuroscience
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Anthropology
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ABSTRACT
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Background: Physical exercise is known to aid stress regulation, however the effects of specific exercise types are
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under-researched. Dance uniquely combines several characteristics that are known to have stress regulatory
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effects, such as music listening. Nonetheless, dance has received only little attention in studies examining the
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stress regulatory effects of exercise.
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Objective: We used a multidisciplinary narrative review as a novel approach to explore the complex relationship
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between dance and stress by integrating psychological, neurobiological, physiological, and socio-cultural find -
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ings. In particular, we looked at the effects of music and rhythm; partnering and social contact; and movement
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and physical activity.
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Findings: There is strong empirical evidence for the beneficial stress regulatory effects of music, social contact,
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and movement, illustrating that dance can promote coping and foster resilience. Neurobiological research shows
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that these findings can be explained by the effects that music, social contact, and movement have on, amongst
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others, dopamine, oxytocin, and β -endorphin modulation and their interplay with the stress system. Socio-
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cultural considerations of the significance of dance help to understand why dance might have these unique ef -
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fects. They highlight that dance can be seen as a universal form of human expression, offering a communal space
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for bonding, healing, and collective coping strategies.
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Discussion: This review is the first to integrate perspectives from different disciplines on the stress regulatory
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effects of dance. It shows that dance has a large potential to aid coping and resilience at multiple levels of the
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human experience. At the same time, we identified that the existing evidence is often still limited by a narrow
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focus on exercise characteristics such as intensity levels. This hinders a more holistic understanding of underlying
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stress regulatory mechanisms and provides important directions for future research.
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1. Introduction
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Chronic stress is seen as a major threat for physical and mental health
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( Marin et al., 2011 ; Wickrama et al., 2022 ). Scholars from the field of
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Sport and Exercise Psychology have examined and evidenced the
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beneficial stress-regulative effects of physical activity and in particular
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physical exercise
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1
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for decades ( Aldana et al., 1996 ; Gerber & Pühse,
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2009 ; Klaperski, 2017 ). Their findings form the basis for a multitude of
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guidelines and practical recommendations highlighting the importance
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of exercise to cope with stress (e.g., Anxiety and Depression Association
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of America, 2022 ; NHS, 2023 ). However, only a small minority of
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studies have actually examined the effects of specific types of exercise
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( Gerber et al., 2014 ; Norris et al., 1992 ). Correlational studies that
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examine the stress-regulative role of exercise do not usually differentiate
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* Corresponding author. Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University, Thomas van Aquinostraat 4, 6525 GD, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
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E-mail addresses: sandra.klaperski@ru.nl (S. Klaperski-van der Wal), jonathan.skinner@surrey.ac.uk (J. Skinner), kpfeffer@health.sdu.dk (K. Pfeffer).
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1
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We follow the definitions provided by Caspersen et al. (1985) and define physical activity as “ any bodily movement produced by skeletal muscles that results in
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energy expenditure ” (p. 126). Two types of physical activity are exercise and sport; both require “ planned, structured and repetitive bodily movement, the objective
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of which is to improve or maintain physical fitness ” ( Caspersen et al., 1985 , p. 126). The terms “ sport ” and “ exercise ” are not always clearly distinguishable; however
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“ sport ” is often used to refer to competitive activities. In line with the review ’ s emphasis on non-competitive activities, we will subsequently focus on and discuss
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“ exercise ” .
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Contents lists available at ScienceDirect
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Psychology of Sport & Exercise
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journal homep age: www.elsevi er.com/locate /psychsport
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https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2025.102823
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Received 30 July 2024; Received in revised form 21 November 2024; Accepted 14 January 2025
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Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
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Available online 6 February 2025
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1469-0292/© 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ).
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## Page 2
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between different types of exercise but categorise participants as more
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or less active (e.g., Azagba & Sharaf, 2014 ; Yao et al., 2022 ). Experi -
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mental studies with specific exercise activities as intervention pro -
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grammes predominantly use aerobic activities such as running or
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aerobic workouts but claim to draw conclusions about the effects of
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“ exercise ” ( Arvidson et al., 2020 ; Klaperski & Fuchs, 2021 ). This leaves
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the field with only little knowledge on what particular types of exercise
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are most beneficial for stress regulation. This is a finding that is
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particularly surprising when considering the increasing evidence for the
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importance of individualised exercise recommendations ( Schorno et al.,
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2022 ), as well as calls to move away from one-size fits all approaches in
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medicine and psychology ( Purgato et al., 2021 ). We argue that this lack
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of attention on stress-regulative effects of individual exercise types could
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be a major oversight as different exercise types can have unique
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stress-regulative characteristics. Understanding these characteristics
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better could enable professionals to make more effective exercise rec -
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ommendations. The aim of the current review is to contribute to a better
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understanding by providing an interdisciplinary synthesis of the
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stress-regulative role of dance.
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2
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The current review will focus on dance as dance seems to have
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particularly stress-reducing and health-strengthening effects. Some of
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the few studies that did examine stress regulatory effects of different
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exercise types found dance activities to mitigate negative effects of stress
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especially well ( Gerber et al., 2014 ; Kim & Kim, 2007 ). Hanna (2006)
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refers to dance as “ a stress vaccine ” (p. 38) and Buck and Snook (2020)
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regard dance as “ a pathway to increased mental resilience ” (p. 302). A
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recent systematic review of the effects of dance interventions further -
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more noted a unique potential for mental health effects inherent to
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dance as a specific form of physical activity ( Fong Yan et al., 2024 ). The
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authors differentiated between dance and other forms of physical ac -
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tivity and focused on psychological and cognitive health outcomes; they
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concluded that structured dance can improve some psychological and
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cognitive health outcomes more than other types of physical activity.
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Building up on these findings, the present paper will, for the first time,
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provide an in-depth overview of the literature on the effects dance has
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on stress, one of the major threats for mental and physical health
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( Wickrama et al., 2022 ). More specifically, we will provide a multidis -
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ciplinary review of psychological, neurobiological, and socio-cultural
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findings to answer the research question how some of the key charac -
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teristics of dance contribute to stress regulation, with a focus on coping
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and resilience.
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1.1. Key characteristics of dance
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When Gerber and colleagues (2014) found that dancing activities
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were able to buffer detrimental effects of perceived stress on mental
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health, they speculated that this might be the case because dancing can
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distract from stressors, warrants high task concentration, provides social
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contact with peers, fosters competence, autonomy and relatedness, and
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because dancing is enjoyable. While all explanations are reasonable,
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they also relate to many other types of exercise activities. Furthermore,
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they do not account for the distinctive socio-cultural significance dance
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is assumed to have. A more holistic understanding of the unique key
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characteristics of dance can be derived from the work conducted by
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anthropological scholars. Pu ˇsnik (2010) defines dance as “ human
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expression through movement ” (p. 5) while highlighting that dance
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should not only be reduced to its physical component as it also bears
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many symbolic roles and meanings for society, as for instance seen in
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religious dance. Similarly, Hanna ( 2006 , p. 33) regards dance as, to
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paraphrase her work, exercise plus aesthetic communication. Hanna
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(2006) highlights the unique opportunities for the expression of emo -
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tions, for the perception of close social ties and synchrony, and for
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interaction with music.
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These descriptions of dance clearly go beyond the intensity level-
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based view of dance typically provided in exercise psychological or
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sport scientific literature. As an exception and possibly a sign for new
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endeavours in the field, the very recent review by Fong Yan et al. (2024)
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highlighted that dance “ is a unique form of physical activity requiring
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complex movements combined with aesthetics, music, choreographed
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movement sequences and planned interactions with other people ” (p. 2).
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Christensen and colleagues (2021) capture the key characteristics of
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dance in their Wheel of Dance that consist of six health-relevant inter -
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twined components: Music & Rhythm; Group-cohesion & Culture; Aes -
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thetics, fitness & technique; Connection & connectedness; Flow &
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mindfulness; and Emotion & Fantasy (p. 9). In our eyes, only a multi -
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disciplinary review can account for this complex interplay between the
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mind , the body , and culture in dance. In the following, we will thus
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summarise and integrate psychological, neurobiological and physio -
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logical, as well as socio-cultural findings exploring the complex rela -
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tionship between dance and stress. Based on some of the key dance
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characteristics highlighted above, we will do so in three different sec -
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tions: 1. Music and rhythm; 2. Partnering and social contact; 3. Move -
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ment and physical activity (see also Fig. 1 for a conceptual overview of
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the structure and content of this review). The three sections were chosen
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by the authors of this narrative review, assuming that these topics were
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the most relevant ones that touched on many of the characteristics and
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dance components previously identified; the review is thus not
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comprehensive as there are still other dance characteristics that can
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have a stress regulatory role (see also the Discussion below).
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Dance not only has different characteristics, it is also being practised
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within very different domains ( Christensen et al., 2021 ) – we refer to
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these as dance types. The review will focus on recreational dance,
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meaning dance undertaken during leisure time rather than for profes -
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sional or competitive reasons. This is because these two types of dance
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have different, often opposite, effects on stress and its perception.
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Competitive dance often triggers stress, e.g., by means of
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performance-related anxiety, overtraining, or injury ( Wainwright et al.,
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2005 ). We will furthermore not expressly explore dance therapy
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although it is an important and widely applied means of supporting
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people with long-term disorders such as Parkinson ’ s disease ( Houston,
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2019 ) or various forms of dementia ( Palo-Bengtsson & Ekman, 2002 ;
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Palo-Bengtsson et al., 1998 ). Following a distinction made by Hanna
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(1979a , p. 332), we examine dance as aesthetic non-utilitarian move -
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ment. Thus, we will not focus on dance movements as part of religious or
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ceremonial dance; it is important to be aware that this decision already
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reflects the predominant meaning dance bears in many Western cultures
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( Hanna, 2006 ; Pu ˇsnik, 2010 ). The text will refer to “ dancers ” when
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discussing people engaging in any form of recreational dance, on their
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own or with a partner or group. Before reviewing the evidence in each of
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the three subsections, we will firstly introduce the concepts of stress and
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stress regulation from the three different angles of psychology, neuro -
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biology, and anthropology.
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1.2. Stress
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Stress is a neurobiological phenomenon that alters the normal
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functioning of the body and brain, and requires multi-level coping with
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changing physical, chemical, psychological or social factors (stressors)
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to maintain the physiological range of balanced functioning (homeo -
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stasis). Homeostasis is a self-regulating dynamic phenomenon that
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maintains physiological stability in living organisms. In principle,
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external or internal factors or conditions that are beyond physiological
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2
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Noteworthily, while we criticise the undifferentiated usage of the term
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“ exercise ” , it is also important to highlight that the term “ dance ” is in itself also
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still too general: “ Dance is a broad umbrella term that encompasses a wide
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variety of styles from highly structured, planned movement sequencing to
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entirely unplanned, intuitive forms of body movement ” ( Fong Yan et al., 2024 ,
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p. 23) and of course also involves different music styles. Thus, our review is still
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a simplification of the subject; publications like the one by Christensen and
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colleagues (2021) provide further differentiation and specification.
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S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
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2
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## Page 3
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or psychological control or perceived to be such can disrupt homeostasis
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and act as potentially harmful stressors when posing a challenge or
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threat to an individual ( McEwen, 2017 ; Sapolsky, 2000 ; Ward et al.,
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2021 , pp. 3 – 14). Organisms have developed different physiological re -
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sponses to stressors; these responses restore the normal physiological
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and biochemical state and are essential for the maintenance of life. Thus,
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it is important to note that the physiological stress response is princi -
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pally protective and/or adaptive ( Sapolsky, 2000 ). However, long-term
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stress can break homeostasis and lead to physiological imbalances or
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even a disease in response to persistent stressors in the form of psy -
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chological, social, and cognitive stimuli (e.g., McEwen, 2017 ).
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Even if the stress process comprises an inseparable combination of
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physiological, psychological, and psychosocial factors, stress initially
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depends on the acute neuro-endocrine response to a stressor
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( Hutmacher, 2021 ). This response entails the activation of the sympa -
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thetic nervous system (SNS) and that of the
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hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis ( Herman et al., 2016 ). The
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SNS triggers an increase in blood pressure (systolic and diastolic) and
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heart rate, while the HPA axis executes an increase in circulating con -
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centrations of cortisol as a main end-point hormonal responder to the
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stressor. As this review will touch on specific aspects of the HPA axis, we
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very briefly recall that it starts at its top tier - the hypothalamus where
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the corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) is released from the hypo -
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thalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) in response to stress. The CRH
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travels via the hypothalamo-pituitary portal system down to the anterior
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pituitary where it triggers secretion of adernocorticotropic hormone
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(ACTH). The ACTH stimulates secretion of several steroid hormones
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from the adrenal cortex, among them cortisol that exerts a major impact
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on the body and brain ’ s functional responses to stress. Currently, sali -
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vary cortisol is widely accepted as a biomarker of acute stress alongside
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alpha-amylase, often in combination with measurements of heart rate
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variability ( Hellhammer et al., 2009 ; Kim et al., 2018 ). To follow pat -
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terns of long-term stress, some researchers also measure hair cortisol
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( Russell et al., 2012 ; Stalder et al., 2017 ).
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While stress depends on innate biological mechanisms, it does not
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only “ exist inside the brain ” as Hutmacher ( 2021 , p. 5) puts it. Stress,
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Hutmacher (2021) highlights, is unthinkable without the way in -
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dividuals relate to, interpret, and deal with their bodies ’ reactions. It is
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thus key to also consider the individual ’ s subjective stress perceptions
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and cognitive, behavioural, and emotional reactions. These can be
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measured by means of self-report, e.g., by assessing perceived acute and
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chronic stress levels, anxiety, and health detriments. From a
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socio-cultural perspective, it is noteworthy that the understanding of
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one ’ s stress response also strongly depends on society and social prac -
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tices, expectations, and notions of stress itself. In modern society, stress
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has become an endemic condition, and Hutmacher (2021) claims that
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“ being stressed out has become a way to be a person ” (p. 5) as (Western)
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societies have developed intersubjectively understandable ways of
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relating thoughts and behaviour to the bodily experience of stress, and
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of dealing with or regulating stress.
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1.3. Stress regulation
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Empirical evidence shows that higher physiological stress levels and
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aggravated perceptions of stress amplify the negative effects of stress on
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health ( Schulz & V ¨ogele, 2015 ). Yet, research has also identified
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different neurobiological mechanisms that regulate the net response to
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stress as well as psychological and psychosocial factors that mitigate
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stress levels and negative effects of stress.
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Among the biological processes that regulate the response to stress,
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there is a feedback mechanism via cortisol and glucocorticoid receptors
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signalling back to the HPA axis, including the hypothalamus ( Pariante &
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Lightman, 2008 ). Also of relevance, β -endorphins, the brain ’ s own
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(endogenous) opioid-like modulators, are closely linked with the
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response to stress. In more detail, CRH that initiates the HPA axis also
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triggers the release of β -endorphins alongside ACTH within the anterior
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pituitary ( Nakao et al., 1978 ). In turn, β -endorphins being opioid re -
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ceptor agonists co-regulate the HPA axis ( Bilkei-Gorzo et al., 2008 ). As a
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rule, opioid agonists buffer the cortisol response to stress ( Drolet et al.,
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2001 ) contrary to opioid antagonists ( Kreek, 2001 ; Lovallo et al., 2012 ).
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The link between the response to stress and β -endorphins is so close that
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β -endorphins are at times used as a possible index of HPA activity ( Takai
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Fig. 1. Conceptual Overview of the Structure and Content of this Review
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Note. SNS = sympathetic nervous system; HPA = hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal.
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S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
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3
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## Page 4
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et al., 2007 ). Furthermore, the neuropeptide hormone oxytocin has been
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found to play a stress regulatory role. In response to various stimuli,
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including sensory stimuli such as touch and warmth, oxytocin is released
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into the general circulation from the posterior pituitary gland
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( Uvnas-Moberg & Petersson, 2005 ). Oxytocin facilitates social and
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emotional behaviour in humans and rodents, including enhancement of
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trust and bonding, and reduction of aggression and anxiety (for review
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see Heinrichs & Domes, 2008 ).
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Beyond such biological mechanisms, in this review, we refer to stress
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regulation as an overarching term for two protective factors which alter
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and reduce negative effects of the response to stressors: coping and
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resilience ( Crum et al., 2020 ; Maiorano et al., 2020 ). Coping can be
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defined as the volitional and automatised use of thoughts, emotions, and
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behaviours to manage internal and external stressful situations
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( Stanisławski, 2019 ). Its main purpose is the reduction of the stress
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response ( Crum et al., 2020 ). Resilience can be defined as an individual’s
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capacity due to which physical and mental health can be maintained
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also in the face of stress and adversity ( Rademacher et al., 2023 ; Wu
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et al., 2013 ). Resilience levels can be increased by strengthening phys -
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iological, psychological, and/or psychosocial factors ( Zueger et al.,
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2023 ). Naturally, coping and resilience are closely associated: coping
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efforts affect an individual’s resilience, and a person’s resilience affects
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their coping strategies ( Ward et al., 2021 , pp. 3–14). Resilient in -
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dividuals are, for instance, more likely to remain optimistic and execute
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effective coping strategies in health and disease ( Haglund et al., 2007 ).
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Previous evidence has shown that individuals use exercise as a
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coping strategy, i.e., they intentionally engage in exercise to manage
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stress ( Elliott et al., 2021 ). Exercise can also lead to increases in resil -
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ience levels, enabling individuals to better overcome stressful events
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( Arida & Teixeira-Machado, 2021 ; Lancaster & Callaghan, 2022 ).
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However, little is known about the mechanisms that underlie this rela -
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tionship, i.e., what particular physiological, psychological, and psy -
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chosocial factors are strengthened by what characteristics of exercising.
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It is key to better understand these mechanisms to make better use of
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stress regulatory processes initiated by different types of exercise. In this
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||
review, we will therefore explore whether and in what way one
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particular type of exercise, namely dance, can strengthen resilience
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levels and be used as a coping strategy to help regulate stress.
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While the concepts of coping and resilience stem from psychology,
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||
research in this area has also become a focus of physiology and neuro -
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science, integrating psychosocial and biological factors ( Rutter, 2006 ).
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Following a multidisciplinary approach, we will therefore present
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neurobiological findings to better understand the biological basis of the
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psychological phenomena. Studies have for instance found that differ -
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ences in coping styles are related to variations in the serotonergic and
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dopaminergic inputs to the medial prefrontal cortex ( Algorani & Gupta,
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||
2023 ). The neural network of this part of the brain is essential for
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||
behavioural flexibility as an attribute of an individual’s coping style
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||
( Coppens et al., 2010 ). In addition, the prosocial neuropeptide oxytocin,
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||
which is an important anxiolytic neuromodulator, and its counterpart
|
||
vasopressin, have been implicated in coping styles ( Algorani & Gupta,
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2023 ), and oxytocin has been found to be associated with resilience
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||
( Yehuda et al., 2006 ). It is plausible to expect that studying the effects of
|
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dance on such biomarkers for resilience, a contested concept in psy -
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chology ( Rademacher et al., 2023 ), might reveal what factors related to
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dance enable a person to better regulate stress. A simultaneous consid -
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eration of the socio-cultural perspective will furthermore provide a
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comparative point of view on what dance means and what dance does
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||
for the so-called social dancer. Drawing from the literature on the an -
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thropology of dance, this review engages with the context of dance in
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the community and in wider society, also considering dance as an act of
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||
enjoyment and passion, and as self- and group-expression. This allows us
|
||
to explore coping and resilience as core concepts of stress regulation in a
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variety of locations and diversity of dance forms (also referred to in the
|
||
literature as movement systems).
|
||
2. Method
|
||
The aim of the current review was to provide an interdisciplinary
|
||
synthesis of the stress-regulative role of recreational dance. More spe -
|
||
cifically, we wanted to summarise psychological, neurobiological, and
|
||
socio-cultural findings on the links between stress, coping, and resilience
|
||
and; 1. Music and rhythm; 2. Partnering and social contact; 3. Movement
|
||
and physical activity. Considering the goal and the multidisciplinary
|
||
approach described above, a narrative review approach was adopted.
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||
Narrative reviews allow one to examine a complex topic from
|
||
different perspectives to develop new insights by delivering a general
|
||
overview and thoughtful interpretation of the current body of knowl -
|
||
edge ( Sukhera, 2022 ). Our review can be best identified as an empirical
|
||
integrative narrative review, as classified by Sukhera (2022) . While this
|
||
review approach allows for the incorporation of diverse methodologies
|
||
and perspectives, it bears a risk of bias when not all relevant sources are
|
||
identified ( Whittemore & Knafl, 2005 ). To reduce this bias, we first tried
|
||
to search in a centralised, systematic way for literature that looked at
|
||
dance and stress. We intended to develop an article collection with all
|
||
relevant literature, to then derive psychological and/or neurobiological
|
||
and/or socio-cultural insights that would be synthesised in the corre -
|
||
sponding subsections. However, upon closer examination of the identi -
|
||
fied literature, we realised that the sources were not sufficient to answer
|
||
the research question of this review (see the Supplementary Online
|
||
Material for a detailed description and the outcomes of the initial
|
||
search). There were fewer studies that had examined stress regulatory
|
||
effects of recreational dance than we had anticipated. We thus decided
|
||
to adopt a more subjective subsection- and discipline-specific, decentral
|
||
iterative and purposive search strategy to identify relevant literature
|
||
( Sukhera, 2022 ). The goal of the adjusted scope of the review was to not
|
||
specifically search for “dance” literature anymore, but to also identify
|
||
and synthesise relevant literature that did not address dance as a specific
|
||
activity (e.g., studies examining the effects of movement in synchrony
|
||
without a dance-link).
|
||
This altered approach meant that each author writing on a subsec -
|
||
tion purposefully searched for and synthesised literature that related to
|
||
their discipline and the topic of a subsection. This was done by a)
|
||
examining the sources identified in the initial centralised literature
|
||
search, b) examining sources already known to the authors as experts in
|
||
the field,
|
||
3
|
||
and c) searching for additional literature using a much
|
||
broader search strategy. For the latter, different databases (see the
|
||
Supplementary Online Material) mainly with the keywords “dance”,
|
||
“music”, “rhythm”, “partnering”, “social contact”, or “movement” in
|
||
combination with the keywords “stress”, “coping”, or “resilience” were
|
||
used, as well as backward and forward snowballing. Considering the
|
||
breadth of this adapted search strategy, it was not feasible to screen all
|
||
abstracts and to exclude studies in a systematic manner. The focus that
|
||
we had adopted initially remained however unchanged, aiming to re -
|
||
view published academic evidence (stemming from journal articles and
|
||
books) on non-clinical samples and recreational dance; a few exceptions
|
||
were made to make important points, e.g., links to research on Parkinson
|
||
Disease or Dance Movement Therapy.
|
||
The literature search and synthesis approach described above
|
||
allowed us to deliver a relevant multidisciplinary overview that answers
|
||
the research question of how key characteristics of dance contribute to
|
||
stress regulation, with a particular focus on coping and resilience; yet, it
|
||
is important to explicitly recognise that we might not have identified
|
||
and/or included all relevant literature on the topic ( Sukhera, 2022 ). The
|
||
current review therefore does not provide a comprehensive synthesis,
|
||
instead it should be regarded as a first interdisciplinary interpretation of
|
||
the evidence on the stress regulatory role of dance that aims to advance
|
||
3
|
||
In the peer review process, several additional sources were included based
|
||
on the reviewers’ expertise in the field. This also illustrates that a different
|
||
author team might have included different studies in their review.
|
||
S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
|
||
4
|
||
## Page 5
|
||
new ideas and research foci ( Sukhera, 2022 ; see also the Discussion
|
||
below). In the following, we will review our findings separately for each
|
||
discipline for each of the three subsections. In the subsequent discussion
|
||
section, we will summarise and integrate the results of the review. Please
|
||
consult Fig. 1 for a brief summary of the main points of each of the
|
||
separate sections.
|
||
3. Music and rhythm
|
||
This first section of the review considers music and rhythm as two
|
||
key aspects of recreational dance, as seen from the multidisciplinary
|
||
perspective of psychology, neuroscience (neurobiology and physiology),
|
||
and anthropology (socio-cultural perspective). We acknowledge that
|
||
music is inherently linked to the body ( Putkinen et al., 2024 ) and as such
|
||
has potent and well documented effects on the response to stress and its
|
||
perception, depending on the type of music. Even passive listening to
|
||
music can have relevant physiological and psychological effects. In some
|
||
aspects, the unique role of rhythm appears to be less researched than the
|
||
role of music. Yet, it needs to be acknowledged that dance and music are
|
||
closely interconnected, and that in particular in a dance context with
|
||
rhythmic music a clear differentiation between the two concepts is
|
||
difficult ( Orgs & Howlin, 2020 ).
|
||
3.1. Psychological findings
|
||
While music plays a pivotal role in dance, there are a lack of studies
|
||
examining the stress-regulative effects music and/or rhythm have while
|
||
engaging in dance. To gain deeper insights into these potential effects,
|
||
we will first scrutinise research concerning the impact of music listening
|
||
on coping and resilience factors in general. Subsequently, we will syn -
|
||
thesise findings on the psychological effects of music listening while
|
||
dancing.
|
||
Whether music can improve coping in challenging situations has
|
||
been researched by examining the effects of music listening on the acute
|
||
stress response to artificial stressors. Thoma et al. (2013) did not find
|
||
support for the assumption that music listening in anticipation of an
|
||
artificial stress task (the Trier Social Stress Test) would reduce the acute
|
||
psychological stress response to the stress task. Labb ´e et al. (2007) ,
|
||
however, found that participants who listened to self-selected relaxing
|
||
or classical music after being exposed to a stressful cognitive speed test
|
||
reported lower anxiety levels and more feelings of relaxation than par -
|
||
ticipants who had listened to heavy metal music; participants who had
|
||
not listened to any music also reported higher state anxiety levels, yet,
|
||
their relaxation ratings were similar to the self-selected and classical
|
||
music conditions ( Labb ´e et al., 2007 ). A review on the effects of music on
|
||
stress-induced arousal likewise found support for a reduction in arousal,
|
||
anxiety, and/or stress levels when participants who were exposed to
|
||
artificial stressors listened to music ( Pelletier, 2004 ). Thus, while the
|
||
existing evidence regarding the effects of music on the acute stress
|
||
response is not fully consistent, music has been found to possess the
|
||
potential to positively contribute to the coping process.
|
||
Another branch of studies has tried to answer the question whether
|
||
listening to music can improve mental health and well-being, e.g., by
|
||
examining effects on stress and anxiety levels ( Corbijn van Willenswaard
|
||
et al., 2017 ; Pelletier, 2004 ). The evidence shows that music-based in -
|
||
terventions can indeed have positive effects. Two large reviews looking
|
||
at patients concluded that music interventions can lead to reductions of
|
||
psychological distress in individuals with coronary heart disease ( Bradt
|
||
& Dileo, 2009 ), as well as decreases in anxiety levels in cancer patients
|
||
( Bradt et al., 2016 ). Corbijn van Willenswaard and colleagues (2017)
|
||
found no clear evidence that listening to music for at least 30 min a day
|
||
for 2 weeks significantly reduced general stress levels in pregnant
|
||
women. However, the authors did find that music-based interventions
|
||
reduced anxiety levels. Overall, there are fewer reviews examining
|
||
stress-regulative effects of passive music listening in non-clinical pop -
|
||
ulations. Yet, when considering a review of findings in non-medical and
|
||
medical settings by de Witte et al. (2020) , a similar result pattern for
|
||
both settings emerges. The authors found, irrespective of the setting, an
|
||
overall significant medium-to-large effect of music interventions that
|
||
were found to have positive effects on both physiological arousal and
|
||
psychological stress-related experiences. More specifically, music in -
|
||
terventions reduced state anxiety, nervousness, restlessness, and feelings
|
||
of worry, as well as salivary cortisol levels, heart rate, and blood pres -
|
||
sure, with overall larger effects for heart rate compared to blood pres -
|
||
sure and hormonal levels ( de Witte et al., 2020 ). These positive effects
|
||
were found for predetermined relaxing music as well as for self-chosen
|
||
music, for instrumental music, music with lyrics, and for music ther -
|
||
apy as well as music interventions; yet, most studies used only
|
||
short-term interventions.
|
||
In their discussion, de Witte et al. (2020) present two different psy -
|
||
chological explanations for the observed effects: first, that listening to
|
||
pleasant music could have a positive influence on emotional valence;
|
||
and second, that music could potentially distract from stress-increasing
|
||
thoughts and thus have positive effects. Interestingly, findings of an
|
||
ambulatory assessment study on the stress-reducing effect of music
|
||
conducted by Linnemann et al. (2015) do support neither of these two
|
||
explanations: while music listening reduced subjective stress levels
|
||
when participants listened to music to relax or when they listened to
|
||
music in the presence of others, these effects were independent of the
|
||
music ’ s valence or arousal; the reason to listen to music for distraction
|
||
was even associated with increased stress levels ( Linnemann et al., 2015 ,
|
||
2016 ). Overall, it can thus be concluded that passive listening to music
|
||
has positive psychological effects. It can also lead to decreases in stress
|
||
levels, in particular when participants listen to music to relax or when it
|
||
is done together with others. The majority of studies thus provide
|
||
additional support for the assumption that music facilitates coping and
|
||
that it increases resilience levels by strengthening important health and
|
||
well-being factors; however, studies examining these effects in the dance
|
||
setting are currently lacking. Similarly, it is not well-understood what
|
||
role rhythm, as an important temporal quality of music, plays for the
|
||
stress-regulative effect found for music listening ( Kim et al., 2018 ;
|
||
Levitin et al., 2018 ). Empirical findings from the field of music therapy
|
||
suggest that dynamic rhythmic entrainment processes could be of
|
||
particular importance: in 2018, Kim et al. found a larger psychophysi -
|
||
ological relaxation response when relaxation music was matched with a
|
||
listener ’ s heartbeat, with the tempo gradually decreasing, compared to a
|
||
condition in which relaxation music was played at a fixed beat. Yet,
|
||
overall, the existing evidence is sparse; more and larger studies are
|
||
needed to explore the particular stress-regulative role of rhythm ( Kim
|
||
et al., 2018 ).
|
||
Even more insightful for this review than studies on the effects of
|
||
music listening are studies that examined the stress-regulative effects of
|
||
music while dancing. Although a whole line of research investigates the
|
||
effects of music listening on exercise-related outcomes (e.g., Ghaderi
|
||
et al., 2009 ; Karageorghis & Priest, 2012 ; Patania et al., 2020 ; see the
|
||
Supplementary Online Material for more details), we identified only two
|
||
relevant studies that specifically examined dance.
|
||
The first study investigated the influence of music on emotional and
|
||
hormonal responses in partnered dance ( Murcia et al., 2009 ; see also the
|
||
Partnering and social contact section below). The authors used four
|
||
different experimental conditions, of which two were dancing with a
|
||
partner with music, and dancing with a partner without music. They
|
||
found that dancing with a partner and music had more positive effects
|
||
on positive affect than dancing with a partner without music. Further -
|
||
more, the music condition also led to higher reductions in salivary
|
||
cortisol. The contrast to earlier findings from Rohleder et al. (2007) ,
|
||
who found increases in cortisol concentrations in ballroom dancers, can
|
||
very likely be explained by differences in the setting: while Murcia et al.
|
||
(2009) investigated the effects of dancing for the purpose of enjoyment,
|
||
Rohleder and colleagues (2007) investigated a high social evaluative
|
||
threat situation in a competitive dance setting.
|
||
The second study that examined stress-related effects of music while
|
||
S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
|
||
5
|
||
## Page 6
|
||
dancing was conducted by Bernardi et al. (2018) . They found that
|
||
dancing to “groovy”
|
||
4
|
||
music (e.g., Superstition from Steve Wonder, see
|
||
Bernardi et al., 2018 ) “produced a distinct state of heightened flow,
|
||
which was not present when the same music was listened to without
|
||
engaging the body” (p. 421). Regarding the experience of feelings of joy
|
||
and power, it did not matter whether participants were dancing or only
|
||
listening to groovy music. Nongroovy music (e.g., What a wonderful
|
||
world from The Innocent Mission, see Bernardi et al., 2018 ) also had
|
||
positive effects on the sense of flow, irrespective of whether participants
|
||
were listening or dancing to it. Interestingly, copying groovy dance
|
||
moves without music led to some feelings of joy and power, but par -
|
||
ticipants did not experience any flow, while the copying of non-groovy
|
||
dance moves without music did not have any positive effects ( Bernardi
|
||
et al., 2018 ). That the different study conditions led to such different
|
||
outcomes nicely illustrates that dance influences music perception and
|
||
that music influences dance perception ( Orgs & Howlin, 2020 ). Bernardi
|
||
and colleagues (2018) conclude that types of movement and types of
|
||
music which are perceived as groovy have positive effects on in -
|
||
dividuals’ feelings, and that only the combination of these two in the
|
||
form of dancing can also create a feeling of flow; they define flow as a
|
||
unique and strongly rewarding experience of deep absorption and
|
||
focused attention ( Bernardi et al., 2018 ). The ability of dance and
|
||
certain (groovy) rhythms to evoke feelings of flow possibly represents
|
||
another way to foster resilience given that flow has been found to be
|
||
positively associated with eudaimonic well-being and life satisfaction,
|
||
and negatively associated with anxiety ( Mao et al., 2020 ).
|
||
3.2. Physiological and neurobiological findings
|
||
The previous section showed that music listening supports positive
|
||
emotion regulation, and that it evokes states related to pleasure and
|
||
reward. Neurobiological studies demonstrate how neural systems, such
|
||
as the brain’s reward pathway, contribute to these psychological effects
|
||
( Salimpoor et al., 2011 ; Yehuda, 2011 ; Zatorre & Salimpoor, 2013 ). The
|
||
reward pathway implicated in the processing of reward and pleasure,
|
||
includes the mesolimbic and mesocortical structures with the nucleus
|
||
accumbens (NAc), the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and the prefrontal
|
||
cortices; they use dopamine as the main neurotransmitter. Brain
|
||
research by means of positron emission tomography (PET) has demon -
|
||
strated that dopamine is released in response to pleasurable music
|
||
( Salimpoor et al., 2011 ). The observed dopamine release within the
|
||
reward pathway is associated with strong emotional responses to music.
|
||
This is interpreted as evidence of a neural mechanism underpinning the
|
||
pleasurable and rewarding effects of music and could be seen as a
|
||
physiological incentive to dance ( Salimpoor et al., 2011 ). Functional
|
||
connectivity analysis conducted by Menon and Levitin (2005) has
|
||
furthermore demonstrated that listening to music modulates the activity
|
||
within the dopaminergic network involved in reward processing, and
|
||
specifically the NAc and the VTA, but also the hypothalamus that is
|
||
involved in the regulation of body homeostasis and the response to
|
||
stress.
|
||
The fact that music stimulates the brain’s reward system is of rele -
|
||
vance to stress when considering the neural mediators implicated in
|
||
both music perception and stress responses. Among those, there are
|
||
β-endorphins from the group of endogenous opioids that, together with
|
||
the neurotransmitter dopamine, play a role in the regulation of behav -
|
||
iours generated by the brain’s reward system related to pleasure, reward
|
||
and motivational states. Those effects can reduce stress and result in an
|
||
enhanced state of well-being associated with β-endorphins ( Veening &
|
||
Barendregt, 2015 ). Such behavioural effects are consistent with the fact
|
||
that β-endorphins are closely linked with the HPA as briefly addressed in
|
||
the section on Stress regulation. The understanding that music and
|
||
rhythmic stimulation can activate the brain’s reward system and, as a
|
||
result, reduce stress, informs and justifies the use of rhythmic music in
|
||
neurorehabilitation ( Kotchoubey et al., 2015 ).
|
||
Noteworthily, music perception is a complex task for the brain as it
|
||
implicates not only the brain’s reward systems but also other separate
|
||
and overlapping cortical networks necessary for the integration of
|
||
melody, harmony, pitch, rhythm, and timbre (e.g., Schmithorst, 2005 ).
|
||
Rhythm is a very important element of music and dance. It is appropriate
|
||
to recall that rhythms are ubiquitous in the natural environment and
|
||
that they are important innate elements of life. Hence, it is plausible to
|
||
expect cross-species responses to musical rhythms or music with a beat.
|
||
An earlier neuroimaging study on the neural basis of human dance
|
||
demonstrated a synchronised interaction of the brain network during
|
||
spatially patterned rhythmic movements of dance ( Brown et al., 2006 ).
|
||
Beat perception and synchronisation are common in humans; innate
|
||
beat synchronisation has even been observed in human newborn infants
|
||
( Winkler et al., 2009 ). But beat synchronisation is also displayed by
|
||
nonhuman animals, including rats; the latter recently studied in depth
|
||
by the Takahashi group ( Ito et al., 2022 ). Their well-publicised study
|
||
reports that both the rat and human participants had optimal beat
|
||
synchronicity based on the head movements and neural recordings,
|
||
which suggests similar neural mechanisms for beat synchronisation in
|
||
rats and humans ( Ito et al., 2022 ). In line with these findings, theories
|
||
state that the perception of and synchronisation with external and in -
|
||
ternal rhythms are vital for the survival of organisms. Hence, music and
|
||
dance evoke rhythm-related rewards and emotions that have both bio -
|
||
logical and social functions ( Wang, 2015 ). Further research is needed to
|
||
understand the role of dance rhythm in stress regulation from the
|
||
neurobiology perspective.
|
||
Yehuda (2011) , while broadly reviewing the role of music in stress,
|
||
draws attention to the fact that electrical activity in the brain is affected
|
||
by listening to music. Studies found that relaxation techniques as well as
|
||
relaxation music can increase alpha waves (6–12 Hz) appearing during
|
||
relaxation and theta waves (4–7 Hz) that are observed during deep
|
||
relaxation ( Yehuda, 2011 ). It is also of relevance that most of the limbic
|
||
brain subregions that are involved in responses to music, such as the
|
||
cingulate cortex, hippocampus, and amygdala ( Harvey, 2020 ), have a
|
||
pronounced presence of oxytocin fibres and high levels of oxytocin re -
|
||
ceptors (cited after Harvey, 2020 , also Landgraf & Neumann, 2004 ).
|
||
Although there is a scarcity of studies directly addressing the role of
|
||
oxytocin in responses to music, it has been demonstrated that listening
|
||
to slow-tempo and fast-tempo music was associated with an increase in
|
||
salivary oxytocin levels and a decrease in cortisol, respectively ( Ooishi
|
||
et al., 2017 ). The authors interpret that changes in oxytocin and cortisol
|
||
linked to music listening play a role in physiological relaxation and
|
||
emotional excitation, respectively ( Ooishi et al., 2017 ). Such findings
|
||
provide important neurobiological explanations why music in -
|
||
terventions and music therapy can be successful in stress-related health
|
||
conditions ( de Witte et al., 2020 , 2022 ). Of broad relevance, frequently
|
||
published measurements of heart rate (HR) and heart rate variability
|
||
(HRV) as the physiological indicators of the activity of the peripheral
|
||
autonomous nervous system confirm that various genres of music reduce
|
||
or increase those parameters of which HRV is used as an indirect indi -
|
||
cator of stress.
|
||
3.3. Socio-cultural findings
|
||
The psychological findings reviewed above provide evidence that
|
||
music and rhythm have unique beneficial stress-regulative effects, and
|
||
the neurobiological findings give important insight into potentially
|
||
underlying physiological mechanisms (see also Fig. 1 ). However, it re -
|
||
mains unknown why music has these unique effects. A review of socio-
|
||
cultural findings within the realm of music, rhythm, and stress can
|
||
4
|
||
Levitin et al. (2018) characterise groovy music as music that compels
|
||
somebody to move along with it. When moving to groovy music, people
|
||
“become aware of its rhythmic flow, and groove is manifested as the kinematic
|
||
feeling arising from one’s embodied experience of entrainment to the music”
|
||
( Levitin et al., 2018 , p. 64).
|
||
S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
|
||
6
|
||
## Page 7
|
||
provide important answers to this question to advance the understand -
|
||
ing of the socio-cultural importance of music and rhythm.
|
||
Anthropological considerations present a diversity of disciplinary
|
||
positions on this subject, ranging from socio-cultural to more evolu -
|
||
tionary perspectives. Contemporary psychologists and biolinguistics
|
||
specialists note that hominids have a propensity and predisposition for
|
||
sound pattern recognition and production – a "preparedness of our
|
||
neural system" ( Ravignani & Madison, 2017 , p. 3) whether trait by
|
||
evolutionary adaptation or by-product by evolutionary exaptation. The
|
||
anthropologist and discipline-founding ethnomusicologist John
|
||
Blacking, in his groundbreaking work in the 1970s that predates this
|
||
new field of biomusicology ( Ravignani et al., 2014 ), states that music is
|
||
"humanly organized sound" ( Blacking, 1973 , p. 32). The ability to pro -
|
||
duce and understand sounds that are considered as standard "physio -
|
||
logical and cognitive processes" (1973, p. 7) presumed by Blacking to be
|
||
genetically inherited faculties: structured sounds are perceived through
|
||
instances of structured listening such as ritual performances amongst the
|
||
Venda of South Africa or England ’ s English Symphony Orchestra.
|
||
Similarly, humanly organised sound leads to "soundly organised hu -
|
||
manity", so Blacking (1973 , p. 89) concludes, arguing that the rela -
|
||
tionship between the production and interpretation of sound is akin to
|
||
that of the production and regulation of society. Bond (2008) makes
|
||
similar assumptions in her study of sensory impaired infants. Working to
|
||
disinter the relations between dance and biology, she suggests that
|
||
sound and movement relate to the formation of "aesthetic community".
|
||
They are the building blocks of society, Bond (2008) postulates: rit -
|
||
ualised vocalisations, and sounds and movements that externalise pri -
|
||
vate experiences and feelings into a public world of shared meanings and
|
||
understandings. The habitual, regulated self-expression of somaesthetic
|
||
knowledge – body receptivity as aisthesis – can be found cross-culturally
|
||
as well as across the lifespan. It is typically tied to music, but not
|
||
necessarily, with some movement systems such as site-specific dance
|
||
focusing upon the external place of movement rather than a connection
|
||
between sound and movement ( Hunter, 2011 ). Mime would be a similar
|
||
example of physical expression and aesthetic non-verbal communication
|
||
less closely tied to sound, or the more rhythmic movements of Japanese
|
||
butoh ( Fraleigh, 1999 ). However, while the above positions can all be
|
||
argued for, most of them remain speculative in the end.
|
||
Adopting an evolutionary perspective, Ravignani (2019) proposes
|
||
rhythmic cognition as a function of evolution, for example via sexual
|
||
selection. Synchrony by sound and movement could offer evolutionary
|
||
adaptational advantage and group stressor-prevention, or the potential
|
||
to uncover what Ravignani (2019 , p. 78) refers to as "rhythmic phy -
|
||
logenies" in classifications of animals from the songs of the zebra finch to
|
||
the staccato hooting of the bonobo. Distinctions between communica -
|
||
tion and music in non-human animals are notoriously difficult to
|
||
maintain, especially with music ’ s design features such as isochrony
|
||
(regular pulse or beat), instrumentality ("sound tools"; Nettl, 1983 ),
|
||
intentionality, and performative contexts. The difficulty of the evolu -
|
||
tionary perspective is that it leaves out the arts-based aesthetic ( Fink
|
||
et al., 2021 , p. 351) and potentially produces "untestable just-so" stories
|
||
of the past ( Fitch, 2006 , p. 207) with its "rhythmic complexity" ( Morley,
|
||
2012 ). Ravignani requests future research still isolate "the genetic and
|
||
neuro-hormonal biological substrates responsible for perception and
|
||
production of isochronous behaviour in humans as well as other ani -
|
||
mals" ( Ravignani & Madison, 2017 , p. 9); yet, while this will undoubt -
|
||
edly give clarity in the social understanding of stress systems and
|
||
stressor relief, it also reflects that the scientific quest upon which the
|
||
above community-related propositions rest is still unfound.
|
||
Ethnographically, and from a social constructionist perspective, both
|
||
music and dance are "nonverbal communication" systems ( Hanna,
|
||
1979b ). They are "performative modes of thought" as bodily intelligence
|
||
exercises an exteriority of the self and group (cf. ( Grau, 1999 , p. 166).
|
||
Hagen and Bryant (2003) press for an approach to dance as functional in
|
||
terms of a socio-cultural explanation for the role of music – and dance –
|
||
in society. The authors explain that music and dance can be seen as
|
||
aesthetic, non-utilitarian and sometimes pre- or proto-linguistic
|
||
communication systems that derive from the need for alliance forma -
|
||
tion between non-group members. For Hagen and Bryant (2003) , music
|
||
and dance are coalition signalling systems that developed during ac -
|
||
tivities such as war and politics. Thus, music serves to establish wider
|
||
alliances and to subsequently maintain social cohesion and internal
|
||
stability that ultimately give onto a group protection from environ -
|
||
mental stressors. Complex rehearsals and performances necessitate close
|
||
group interaction as rhythm is articulated, such as the "social rhythm"
|
||
found in Brazilian Candombl ´e ( Sj ø rslev, 2013 ); the "communitas"
|
||
( Turner, 1969 ) of traditional and modern dance events; and the
|
||
hyper-density and solidarity of togetherness, collaboration or intimacy
|
||
between artist and audience ( Chrysagis & Karampampas, 2017 , p. 9).
|
||
Moreover, music – and dance – can easily be appreciated and decoded by
|
||
even wider audiences ( Hagen & Bryant, 2003 , p. 30) (an additional
|
||
example is provided in the Supplementary Online Material).
|
||
4. Partnering and social contact
|
||
Dance provides not only physical activity, motor coordination, and
|
||
sensory and emotional responses to music and rhythm. Many types of
|
||
dance also involve forms of physical or social contact and partnering:
|
||
touch, social interactions, group entrainment, or movement in syn -
|
||
chrony – all leading to a perception of togetherness, i.e. joint agency as a
|
||
social unit ( Cross et al., 2024 ; Phillips-Silver & Keller, 2012 ). The broad
|
||
attractiveness, sense of social cohesion, and significance of social con -
|
||
tact in human lives motivate people across various ages to dance with
|
||
others ( Coogan et al., 2023 ; Qu et al., 2023 ). This section is focused on
|
||
partnering and social contact in dance as those key aspects uniquely add
|
||
to the constellation of dance features as a form of complex activity that
|
||
extends well beyond physical exercise or expression of movement tuned
|
||
to music and rhythm.
|
||
4.1. Psychological findings
|
||
The presence of and connection with others in leisure time dance
|
||
activities, from line dancing to nightclub clubbing, is considered to be an
|
||
important factor for the stress regulatory effects attributed to dance
|
||
( Garcia-Mispireta, 2023 ; Nadasen, 2008 ; Tarr et al., 2015 ). Yet, there is
|
||
not a lot of evidence on stress-related psychological effects of partnering
|
||
and social contact in dance. One of the few experimental studies that
|
||
examined the effects of social contact in dance more systematically is the
|
||
one by Murcia et al. (2009) that has already been described above. The
|
||
authors found that dancing tango without a partner but with music did
|
||
not have the same beneficial effects on affect as dancing with a partner
|
||
and music. On a descriptive level, having no partner resulted in even
|
||
lower positive affect levels than having no music, yet, the difference
|
||
between the two conditions was not statistically significant. Cortisol
|
||
levels also decreased when participants were dancing without a partner,
|
||
yet not as much as in the partner-tango condition ( Murcia et al., 2009 ).
|
||
However, it can of course be argued that dancing tango without a
|
||
partner is quite unusual and that it is thus no surprise that not the same
|
||
beneficial effects as in normal tango dance emerge.
|
||
Instead of looking at the losses when a partner is removed, it is
|
||
therefore also interesting to look at the gains when a partner or social
|
||
contact is added. Unfortunately, we do not know of a study that sys -
|
||
tematically examined such gains in a dancing context, but several
|
||
studies found benefits of exercising together with a partner for other
|
||
exercise types. Sackett-Fox et al. (2021) , for instance, found that par -
|
||
ticipants experienced higher positive affect when exercising with their
|
||
romantic partner than when exercising alone. Stress levels were not
|
||
examined, yet higher positive affect levels are regarded to strengthen
|
||
well-being and thus also play an important stress regulatory role,
|
||
possibly fostering resilience levels ( Lyubomirsky et al., 2005 ). Other
|
||
studies likewise found exercise to have more beneficial health effects
|
||
when performed together with others ( Kanamori et al., 2016 ) or as part
|
||
S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
|
||
7
|
||
## Page 8
|
||
of a sports team ( Eime et al., 2013 ). It is hypothesised that strengthened
|
||
social factors cause these additional health benefits, for instance an in -
|
||
crease in levels of social connectedness or social support. Remarkably,
|
||
these social factors have received only little attention in studies exam -
|
||
ining the stress regulatory effects of exercise ( Plante et al., 2001 ), and a
|
||
distinction of exercise or group exercise is usually not made in experi -
|
||
mental studies (e.g., Klaperski & Fuchs, 2021 ), impeding meaningful
|
||
inferences.
|
||
In addition to studies examining the effects of social contact while
|
||
exercising, studies investigating the effects of social/partner support on
|
||
the acute stress response can provide insights into the importance of
|
||
social contact and/or touch for stress regulation. While several studies in
|
||
this area found that social support by a partner and/or stranger
|
||
decreased the acute physiological stress response, they found no dif -
|
||
ferences regarding the acute subjective stress response ( Ditzen et al.,
|
||
2007 ; Kirschbaum et al., 1995 ) or state anxiety levels ( Ditzen et al.,
|
||
2007 ). The findings by Kirschbaum et al. (1995) furthermore point to -
|
||
wards sex-specific patterns of the effects of social support, as only men
|
||
showed reduced physiological stress responses when supported by their
|
||
partners (stranger support did not have this effect). Ditzen and col -
|
||
leagues (2007) did find positive effects on the physiological stress
|
||
response in female participants, yet only in the case of physical contact,
|
||
not when male participants provided their female partners with verbal
|
||
social support (all examined participant dyads were heterosexual cou -
|
||
ples). Thus overall, the evidence in this field is still unclear and studies
|
||
examining the effects of touch of non-romantic friends or dance partners
|
||
are lacking. An interesting piece of evidence, that actually supports the
|
||
idea that positive effects can also be initiated by the presence of
|
||
non-romantic partners stems from Linnemann et al. (2016) . They
|
||
examined real-life stress levels and the effects of music listening in an
|
||
ambulatory assessment study over seven days. Results indicated that
|
||
listening to music in the presence of others led to more profound re -
|
||
ductions in subjective stress levels; this effect occurred independently of
|
||
the familiarity of the others present. The authors explained their find -
|
||
ings with a potential increased feeling of social cohesion ( Linnemann
|
||
et al., 2016 ).
|
||
In addition to the stress-reductive effects of physical contact, the
|
||
synchronisation with somebody else, especially when moving to music,
|
||
is considered to cause positive feelings toward a partner, trust, and social
|
||
bonding ( de Witte et al., 2020 ; Horwitz et al., 2022 ). Lang et al. (2017)
|
||
found that participants who showed high levels of synchronous arm
|
||
movements were rated as more likeable than participants who
|
||
synchronised their movements less. Another study investigating the ef -
|
||
fects of music on interpersonal coordination showed that participants
|
||
who were asked to engage in chair rocking synchronised their chair
|
||
rocking more strongly when listening to music and furthermore reported
|
||
to feel more connected to their fellow chair rocking participant in the
|
||
study ( Demos et al., 2012 ). This corresponds with another study ’ s
|
||
findings showing that participants who listened (via headphones) to the
|
||
same music and danced in synchrony felt closer to each other than
|
||
participants who listened to the same music but who performed different
|
||
movements ( Tarr et al., 2015 ). Findings by von Zimmermann et al.
|
||
(2018) furthermore highlight that in a larger group not unitary syn -
|
||
chrony but distributed coordination, i.e., echoing others movement,
|
||
predicted liking of others. Considering that the feeling of social
|
||
connectedness is an important resilience factor ( Richards, 2016 ), these
|
||
findings provide support for the unique stress-regulative effects of
|
||
movement in synchrony and movement as coordinated action.
|
||
4.2. Neurobiological and physiological findings
|
||
Social behaviours are universal across the animal kingdom; they
|
||
underpin reproduction, species success and survival. This also applies to
|
||
humans who evolved as a social and highly affiliative species. Human
|
||
social behaviour plays a significant role in the complexity of individual
|
||
well-being and mental health, as highlighted by the psychological effects
|
||
reviewed above. A large number of studies in the area of social neuro -
|
||
science have been published and it is beyond the remit of the present
|
||
review to explore them all here in detail. As a summary, it can be stated
|
||
that social experience can be a source of comfort or anxiety, thus
|
||
affecting the perception of stress and its physiological manifestations
|
||
( Insel, 2002 ). The brain networks involved in social behaviours and
|
||
social cognition have been researched in depth together with their
|
||
molecular, cellular, and computational mechanisms ( Chen & Hong,
|
||
2018 ). The neurobiology of social behaviour points at the involvement
|
||
of the neuropeptides oxytocin and vasopressin, which are distributed
|
||
within the limbic system as mentioned above (e.g., Landgraf & Neu -
|
||
mann, 2004 ). As already stated in the section Stress regulation , oxytocin
|
||
supports positive social interactions and attachment ( Insel & Young,
|
||
2001 ); it also plays a role as a protective factor against stress, including
|
||
psychosocial stress in humans ( Heinrichs et al., 2003 ). Social touch as an
|
||
element of social contact can in particular act as a stress buffer through
|
||
engaging the brain pathways and networks that regulate social attach -
|
||
ment via oxytocin and endorphin signalling ( Morrison, 2016 ).
|
||
The present focus is maintained on the aspects of social behaviours
|
||
associated with dance. To our knowledge, there is a striking paucity of
|
||
research on the links between dance as a social experience and oxytocin
|
||
as a prosocial hormone/neuromodulator. A study of relevance in this
|
||
context is the one that assessed the role of intranasally administered
|
||
oxytocin in modulating synchrony during dance ( Josef et al., 2019 ).
|
||
Interestingly, administration of oxytocin (vs. placebo) increased move -
|
||
ment synchrony in dancing pairs, thus leading the authors to the
|
||
conclusion that central oxytocin is implicated in synchronised inter -
|
||
personal movement during dance ( Josef et al., 2019 ). This interpretation
|
||
remains consistent with the role of oxytocin in the regulation of social
|
||
behaviour (e.g., Heinrichs et al., 2009 ). It is fair to assume that the
|
||
aspect of social contact and synchrony in dance, both an attractive and
|
||
important element of people ’ s motivation to dance socially, is regulated
|
||
by the brain ’ s oxytocin system. Future research needs to bring more
|
||
evidence in support of this hypothesis.
|
||
Regarding the topic of partnering in dance, a novel two-person fMRI
|
||
study observed the brain activity in trained couple dancers who alter -
|
||
nated between being the leader and the follower ( Chauvign ´e et al.,
|
||
2018 ). The leading dancer ’ s brain displayed a pattern of self-orientation,
|
||
in association with activation of the brain areas involved in motor
|
||
planning and monitoring, navigation, and error correction. In contrast,
|
||
the brain of the dancer who was following showed a more sensory,
|
||
externally-oriented pattern ( Chauvign ´e et al., 2018 ). Studies of this kind
|
||
demonstrate the intricate neural controls implicated in dance not only as
|
||
a movement exercise but also as social interaction.
|
||
4.3. Socio-cultural findings
|
||
The preceding sections highlighted how partnering - or even mir -
|
||
roring/synchronising with another person - can positively impact stress
|
||
reduction. The neurobiological position appears to extend the socio-
|
||
cultural suggestion made by Blacking who proposed that humans have
|
||
"species-specific characteristics" ( Blacking, 1977 , p. 8). In his view,
|
||
humans are biologically programmed to come together and cooperate,
|
||
and that in that interaction and coherence, humans evince sensibilities
|
||
that allow them to appreciate and respond to others. In the shared so -
|
||
matic experience of a partner dance there is a synchrony that is elicited
|
||
expressly by shared music-making and dancing: two people typically
|
||
come together, engage and share understandings of each other ’ s phys -
|
||
icality. This capacity to become entrained with another person is seen as
|
||
important facilitator of coordinated activities ( Phillips-Silver et al.,
|
||
2010 ).
|
||
From an evolutionary anthropology perspective, research in the last
|
||
two decades has developed from descriptive ethnographic studies of
|
||
music-making, marching, and dancing - what McNeill (1995) had
|
||
described as the "muscular bonding" rituals. Wiltermuth and Heath
|
||
(2009) experimented with synchronous movement and singing to
|
||
S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
|
||
8
|
||
## Page 9
|
||
discover that synchrony facilitates future cooperation in group activ -
|
||
ities. Evolutionary psychologist Dunbar (2004) (see also Liebenberg,
|
||
2017 ) proposed the more formative position that the endorphins given
|
||
off from rituals of primate grooming, collective music-making, dance,
|
||
and religious worship are an adaptive strategy to promote group
|
||
bonding and prosocial behaviour. In effect, attention to music and
|
||
rhythm are a critical aspect of the continued evolution of primates. This
|
||
social advantage hypothesis has since been tested by Cohen and col -
|
||
leagues ( Cohen et al., 2009 , 2014 ; Tarr et al., 2015 ). They demonstrated
|
||
that synchrony in drumming, dancing, and rowing led to the release of
|
||
opioids and elevated pain thresholds (a proxy for endorphins). The
|
||
assumed direct connection between neurohormones and prosocial
|
||
behaviour was, however, not borne out in drumming experiments in
|
||
Brazil ( Cohen et al., 2014 ), for all the resilience to pain.
|
||
In addition to these processes mainly focused on others, dancing with
|
||
others also influences subjective states. In her early work, Hanna covers
|
||
a range of sociocultural examples on affect, what she defines as "the
|
||
conscious subjective aspect of emotion" ( Hanna, 1987 , p. 67). Pleasure
|
||
in dancing with another, satisfaction in learning and executing moves in
|
||
unison, excitement and a sense of novelty at significant meaningful
|
||
practices, altered states of consciousness from dance highs to ecstatic
|
||
trance possessions: these can all be the effects of partner social dancing
|
||
that, in their catharsis, share a reduction in stress levels. Whether ritual
|
||
dance (for war, for celebration, for commemoration, for possession) or
|
||
social dance (for physical enjoyment, for social company, for exotic
|
||
difference, for feminist independence [cf. Skinner, 2007 ; Skinner &
|
||
Neveu Kringelbach, 2012 ]), Hanna (2006 , p. 51) refers to the various
|
||
dancings as formative "stress management programmes". They are the
|
||
precursors to dance as therapy whether informally as in the counter to
|
||
conditions associated with Parkinson’s ( Houston, 2019 ), PSTD
|
||
( Dieterich-Hartwell, 2017 ), depression and schizophrenia, or formally
|
||
as dance movement therapy (DMT) ( Chaiklin & Wengrower, 2015 ).
|
||
DMT is not the focus of this review. We thus recognise its importance
|
||
and cover a few more aspects of it in the Supplementary Online Material.
|
||
Here, we only briefly note the distinct variation of DMT in the wider
|
||
form of Contact Improvisation. This dance-art developed in the United
|
||
States in the early 1970s as a social experiment is what dance anthro -
|
||
pologist Novack (1990 , p. 3) refers to as "egalitarianism and commu -
|
||
nality". It is a non-compositional movement of its time that demonstrates
|
||
American cultural values, such as utilitarian individualism. It develops
|
||
by stimulus and response whereby the flow of energy between dancers is
|
||
key. It promotes responsiveness in the body and is sensual rather than
|
||
sexual. Bodies move together independently "with no set moves other
|
||
than an awareness of their dynamic exchange of touch" ( Pallant, 2017 ,
|
||
p. 9). Novack (1990 , p. 185) promotes this folk dance" for fostering ‘both
|
||
calm peacefulness and wild disorientation’ as dancers become
|
||
comfortable following the laws of nature with their bodies (friction,
|
||
gravity, momentum, inertia) even should it lead to disorientation.
|
||
This ability to assume and relinquish agency, to also demonstrate
|
||
attunement within the self and between the self and the other (inter- and
|
||
intra-kinaesthetic attunement) is a pathway to de-stressing. It is exam -
|
||
ined more recently by Deans and Pini (2022) as they bring the sociology
|
||
of the body work of Bourdieu and Wacquant with, respectively, their
|
||
habitus and cathectic schemata ( Deans & Pini, 2022 , pp. 138–139) - the
|
||
underlying habits and dispositions of human practice. The kinaesthetic
|
||
awareness of the body, refined and honed through practice, is an
|
||
"attunement" within the self and without the self. Traversing this
|
||
interface is more than artistic in that it necessitates a body confidence
|
||
alongside the self-consciousness. The ability to interact constitutes a
|
||
high degree of emotional development in the dance partners according
|
||
to the authors as developmental attunement takes place on the dance
|
||
floor rather like the developmental parenting of an infant through
|
||
repeated expressions and surprising faces and gentle throws in the air
|
||
( Deans & Pini, 2022 , p. 8). This capacity to surrender and let go in the
|
||
adult is a capacity with uncertainty in life. Between dancers, an inter -
|
||
personal resonance can develop, an embodied togetherness for Himberg
|
||
et al. (2018) . It translates into a resilience in the face of what the poet
|
||
John Keats referred to as a "negative capability" (cf. Bion, 1970 , p. 125).
|
||
Bion (1970) elaborates that this is effectively - or perhaps affectively - a
|
||
guard against the interminable.
|
||
Touch can be both object and subject: being toucher and touched is
|
||
simultaneous in this non-localised of senses. The act of touching and the
|
||
sense of touching take place at the same time. One might refer to touch
|
||
as a rebuttal to the buffetings of social stress upon the individual.
|
||
Following Aristotle, it is, for Paterson, the primary sense: it is the first
|
||
sense developed in the embryo, and it is at the core of our "sensory fa -
|
||
cility" ( Paterson, 2007 , p. 7). In detail, this tactile cutaneous sense of
|
||
pressure, of physical resistance, stems from the stimulation of mecha -
|
||
noreceptors. It aligns the body-self through a learned perception of po -
|
||
sition (proprioception), and in the context of dance betrays an aesthetic
|
||
quality and affective reaction in the dancer/s and audience. If the
|
||
mechanisms are universal, their interpretation and understanding are
|
||
socio-cultural, metaphysical and can be affected by neuro-diversity
|
||
(whether desexualised intimacy of New York "cuddle parties" [ Mayr,
|
||
2023 ], moral stance to prohibitions of Untouchable caste groups in India
|
||
( Guru & Sarukkai, 2018 ), or sensory differences in autistic horse riders
|
||
[ Fitzgerald, 2013 ]). This "haptic aesthetics", Paterson (2007 , p. 9) sug -
|
||
gests, has an immediacy about it that is comforting, self-affirming and
|
||
verifying.
|
||
With another, the social dancer thus perceives "a mutual co-
|
||
implication" ( Paterson, 2007 , p. 3); this is "indistinction" for Bollen
|
||
( 2001 , p. 291) writing about queer kinaesthesia as dancers’ out them -
|
||
selves in the social and dancefloor lives in his study of Mardi Gras in
|
||
Sydney, Australia. On nightclub dancefloors, Garcia (2013) identified a
|
||
"slippery togetherness", a feeling of connection that creates a space of
|
||
belonging and social cohesion while preserving anonymity. In clubs,
|
||
tactile gestures that would be regarded as inappropriate otherwise, offer
|
||
moments of intimacy ( Garcia-Mispireta, 2023 ). Bodies merge and the
|
||
self emerges from the dancing with the other. Anthropology of the senses
|
||
scholar Le Breton (2017 , p. 97) opines similarly that "Touch is the sense
|
||
par excellence of closeness". Touching another orientates the person as
|
||
the boundary between self and other is established and felt. It calms and
|
||
reassures with its "predictable reference points" for Le Breton (2017 , p.
|
||
100). The traces of the touch are tangible and also leave an intangible
|
||
residue. To return to Aristotle (2017 , pp. 41–43; 419a12,
|
||
423b6-424a12), there is a "something in between" about the object
|
||
touch and the flesh organ of the body where it is perceived and how it
|
||
affects us. It is intermediate and both tangible and intangible as a core
|
||
perceptual capacity. Without this, resilience is not even feasible. There is
|
||
no, what Dagnino-Subiabre ( 2022 ) expressed more recently, "social
|
||
buffering": behavioural patterns or abilities to mitigate the dangers of
|
||
the human environment.
|
||
5. Movement and physical activity
|
||
Above, we reviewed the evidence on the stress regulatory role of
|
||
music and rhythm, and partnering and social contact, as dance often
|
||
involves these characteristics. This might give dance a particularly
|
||
important stress regulatory role. A characteristic that is always present
|
||
in dance is physical movement. We will therefore provide a separate
|
||
albeit brief overview of the evidence on the relationship between dance-
|
||
based movement/physical activity, stress, and outcomes related to
|
||
coping and resilience. Noteworthily, while all types of exercise involve,
|
||
per definition (see footnote 1), physical movement, dance movements
|
||
still differ from other exercise movements: in contrast to most other
|
||
types of exercise (like running or playing football), dance can be
|
||
engaged in as a type of planned and repetitive exercise or sport. Yet, it
|
||
can also be a purely aesthetic and non-utilitarian physical activity/
|
||
movement without any exercise-related goals (e.g., dancing at a party or
|
||
as part of a cultural practice) ( Christensen et al., 2021 ).
|
||
S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
|
||
9
|
||
## Page 10
|
||
5.1. Psychological findings
|
||
The manifold stress-regulative effects of movement or physical ac -
|
||
tivity in general have been the topic of numerous empirical studies and
|
||
reviews ( Gerber & Colledge, 2023 ; Gerber & Pühse, 2009 ; Klaperski,
|
||
2017 ). Findings for different activity types, like for instance running or
|
||
dance aerobics, are usually not differentiated between when examining
|
||
the stress regulatory effects of physical activity or exercise ( Arvidson
|
||
et al., 2020 ; Klaperski & Fuchs, 2021 ) – a potential shortcoming we have
|
||
highlighted above. In this subsection, we therefore want to review the
|
||
evidence on the specific stress regulatory effects of dance (movements).
|
||
In doing so, it is important to acknowledge that it is very hard to
|
||
distinguish the effects of natural dance movement from other dance
|
||
factors such as music or touch. Reviewing the evidence nonetheless
|
||
provides an important overview of the evidence that looked at the stress
|
||
regulatory effects of dance in general. Previous publications that
|
||
examined the stress regulatory effects of physical activity have used the
|
||
well-known Transactional model of stress to explore how physical ac -
|
||
tivity can impact stress regulation ( Fuchs et al., 2020 ; Lazarus & Folk -
|
||
man, 1984 ). In line with these publications, we will briefly summarise
|
||
the influence of dance on the four main stress regulatory pathways
|
||
relating to this model: 1) direct reductions of stressors; 2) increases of
|
||
psycho-social resources; 3) reductions of the stress reaction; and 4)
|
||
direct improvements of health and well-being levels ( Fuchs et al., 2020 ).
|
||
Much of the evidence reviewed above already shows that stress-
|
||
regulative effects of dance can also be attributed to these four path -
|
||
ways. Firstly, the subsection on Partnering and social contact showed that
|
||
dance facilitates social contact and connection. This means that loneli -
|
||
ness and social disconnection can be reduced, i.e., stressors that have
|
||
been found to bear greater mortality risk than physical inactivity
|
||
( Holt-Lunstad et al., 2017 ; Liu et al., 2023 ; Nadasen, 2008 ; Wu et al.,
|
||
2023 ). Dance is however not expected to affect the extent of individual
|
||
stressful life experience in general. Thus, findings by Bass et al. (2002)
|
||
showing that aerobic dance classes did not reduce stressful life experi -
|
||
ences are not surprising ( Fong Yan et al., 2024 ). In addition to the
|
||
reduction of certain stressors, dancing can, secondly, improve important
|
||
psycho-social resources and thus appraisal processes. Dance has for
|
||
instance been found to positively impact self-esteem, one ’ s self-concept,
|
||
or social support perceptions, as well as coping strategies ( Burkhardt &
|
||
Brennan, 2012 ; Quiroga Murcia et al., 2010 ). Looking at the third
|
||
pathway, several studies found music listening to reduce the acute stress
|
||
response, making it very likely that regular dancing reduces the acute
|
||
stress response just like it has been found for other types of exercise
|
||
( Gerber & Fuchs, 2020 ; Klaperski et al., 2014 ). However, in contrast to
|
||
studies showing that dance competitions increase acute stress levels ( de
|
||
las Heras-Fern ´andez et al., 2023 ; Rohleder et al., 2007 ) to-date no study
|
||
has examined the effects of non-competitive dance on the acute psy -
|
||
chological and physiological stress response. Evidence showing that
|
||
dancing in particular reduces the stress response is thus currently lack -
|
||
ing. Fourth, several studies reviewed above showed that dance can help
|
||
to regulate stress by directly improving health and well-being outcomes,
|
||
thus increasing resilience ( Buck & Snook, 2020 ; Fuchs et al., 2020 ). In
|
||
addition to the studies related to music and social contact described
|
||
above, evidence for this health-strengthening pathway also comes from
|
||
a multitude of dance intervention studies that have not yet been
|
||
considered in our synthesis. In the following, we will therefore briefly
|
||
review their main findings.
|
||
Direct positive effects on mood, affect, distress, and well-being have
|
||
been found in studies looking at the effects of a single dance session ( Kim
|
||
& Kim, 2007 ; West et al., 2004 ; Zajenkowski et al., 2015 ), as well as in
|
||
studies examining the effects of longer dance programmes or in -
|
||
terventions ( Burkhardt & Brennan, 2012 ; Duberg et al., 2020 ; Liu et al.,
|
||
2023 ; Pinniger et al., 2013 ; Sheppard & Broughton, 2020 ). In a recent
|
||
review on the topic, Sheppard and Broughton (2020) concluded that
|
||
dance participation contributes positively to individuals ’ health and
|
||
well-being across different cultures and age groups. Interesting results
|
||
from a mixed-methods study with leisure time dancers furthermore
|
||
show that such dance benefits relate to a variety of factors, for example
|
||
to emotions, well-being and meaningfulness, creativity, and physical
|
||
abilities ( Quiroga Murcia et al., 2010 ). The previously mentioned study
|
||
by Bernardi et al. (2018 ; see also the section Music and rhythm )
|
||
furthermore highlights that rhythmic or groovy moments, as seen in
|
||
dance activities, cause particularly positive effects: participants who
|
||
copied groovy dance moves without music experienced some feelings of
|
||
joy and power, while participants copying non-groovy dance moves
|
||
without music did not report any positive emotional effects ( Bernardi
|
||
et al., 2018 ).
|
||
As physical activity is known to generally promote health and well-
|
||
being ( Gerber & Colledge, 2023 ), studies comparing the
|
||
health-strengthening effects of dance with the effects of other exercise
|
||
activities are of particular interest. A recent meta-analysis on the
|
||
effectiveness of dance interventions on improving psychological and
|
||
cognitive health concluded that while dance was not generally found to
|
||
be more beneficial than other physical activity interventions, there was
|
||
“ preliminary evidence to suggest that dance may be superior to other
|
||
physical activity interventions for the psychological outcomes of moti -
|
||
vation [ … ], distress (hostility and somatisation) [ … ], depression [ … ],
|
||
emotional wellbeing [ … ] and cognitive outcomes ” ( Fong Yan et al.,
|
||
2024 , p. 20). The authors also highlighted that dance interventions
|
||
tended to have higher retention rates; yet due to a huge methodological
|
||
variability and an overall low-to-moderate quality of the included
|
||
studies the findings need to be interpreted with caution ( Fong Yan et al.,
|
||
2024 ). All in all, existing evidence provides support for the assumption
|
||
that movement does not equal movement and that exercise does not
|
||
equal exercise. In particular rhythmical dance movements seem to result
|
||
in more beneficial psychological and health-strengthening effects.
|
||
However, further research in this area is needed to draw more robust
|
||
conclusions.
|
||
5.2. Neurobiological and physiological findings
|
||
The neurobiological and physiological bases of movement have a
|
||
remarkable presence in the academic literature. There are many
|
||
comprehensive reviews that provide in depth insights in the neural
|
||
mechanisms of exercise playing a role in health and disease, and across
|
||
the life span, for example Nicolini et al. (2021) , Won et al. (2021) , and
|
||
Nowacka-Chmielewska et al. (2022) – a review that is also concerned
|
||
with stress. A recent literature review that focused on changes in stress
|
||
pathways as a possible mechanism of aerobic exercise effects on brain
|
||
health argues that physical activity in the form of aerobic exercise im -
|
||
proves neurocognitive health, although no original studies have been
|
||
found in support of the long-term effects of exercise on stress pathways
|
||
implicated in this process ( Molina-Hidalgo et al., 2023 ). To provide a
|
||
similarly comprehensive overview of the role of physical activity as part
|
||
of dance effects is beyond the scope of the present article, instead we will
|
||
briefly summarise the most important neurobiological and physiological
|
||
stress-regulative effects physical activity is known to have.
|
||
Physical activity famously boosts endorphins in the brain which
|
||
enhances the perception of well-being (e.g., Veening & Barendregt,
|
||
2015 ). In addition, and as already mentioned above, endorphins are
|
||
closely linked with the HPA axis that is directly implicated in the
|
||
physiological response to stress (e.g., Takai et al., 2007 ). There is also
|
||
ample evidence of dopamine involvement in neurobiological responses
|
||
to physical exercise ( Gorrell et al., 2022 ; Matta Mello Portugal et al.,
|
||
2013 ). This neurotransmitter is implicated in movement control within
|
||
the subcortical part of the brain - the basal ganglia - and also the reward
|
||
pathway as already discussed above in the section about music and
|
||
rhythm. Experimental studies in rats show that physical exercise en -
|
||
hances dopamine release in both the dorsal striatum as part of the basal
|
||
ganglia, and its ventral part, the nucleus accumbens (NAc) which is an
|
||
important region of the reward system ( Bastioli et al., 2022 ). The brain
|
||
derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) plays a role in exercise-increased
|
||
S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
|
||
10
|
||
## Page 11
|
||
dopamine release in the dorsal striatum and NAc ( Bastioli et al., 2022 ;
|
||
Nicolini et al., 2021 ). Dopamine release is also enhanced in patients with
|
||
Parkinson ’ s disease (PD, a movement disorder with drastically reduced
|
||
dopamine availability in the basal ganglia) who exercise ( Mak et al.,
|
||
2017 ). The link between physical exercise and dopamine can also help
|
||
interpret the long-term positive effects of dance movement in PD, and
|
||
the clinical benefits observed in PD patients who dance ( de Natale et al.,
|
||
2017 ; McGill et al., 2018 ). This is due to the fact that dance incorporates
|
||
physical activity, and movement, and rhythm - all of which together
|
||
improve body movement initiation, and gait and balance that are typi -
|
||
cally impaired in PD. Of relevance, reports suggest that the best im -
|
||
provements in movement initiation and body balance can be observed in
|
||
patients with PD participating in dance groups when compared with
|
||
those in exercise only groups ( Earhart, 2009 ).
|
||
More broadly, movement and physical exercise improve one ’ s
|
||
health, mood, and sense of well-being in the longer term, as discussed
|
||
above from the psychology perspective. These effects can increase
|
||
resilience and improve a person ’ s ability to cope with stress. Of note, and
|
||
significance with respect to our socio-cultural findings below, dance/
|
||
movement training appears to improve cortisol regulation in older
|
||
adults better than aerobic exercise (without dance). Vrinceanu et al.
|
||
(2019) for example showed that after three months of 3hrs training per
|
||
week, a dance movement training group had lower salivary cortisol
|
||
values post-training compared with an aerobic exercise and a waitlist
|
||
group, even though fitness improved only in the aerobic exercise group
|
||
( Vrinceanu et al., 2019 ). Similarly, Ho et al. (2018) found that dance
|
||
movement training led to steeper diurnal cortisol slopes in highly
|
||
stressed breast cancer patients. Such findings that dance could offer a
|
||
preventive measure against negative effects of HPA axis hyperactivity
|
||
( Vrinceanu et al., 2019 ) are important because elevated cortisol levels
|
||
are associated with ageing, and preventive interventions that can
|
||
moderate cortisol levels can potentially limit the adverse impact of HPA
|
||
axis hyperactivity on physiological ageing. These findings that support
|
||
the beneficial link between dance movement training and healthy hor -
|
||
monal stress regulation complement earlier research showing a similar
|
||
link with perceived stress both in healthy older adults and in clinical
|
||
populations ( Br ¨auninger, 2012 ; Ho et al., 2018 ; Kluge et al., 2012 ).
|
||
Overall, the evidence suggests that dance movement training can
|
||
beneficially affect the hormonal regulation of stress independently of
|
||
perceived psychological effects - a finding that also aligns with mis -
|
||
matches between physiological and psychological stress responses
|
||
reviewed above.
|
||
To conclude this aspect, engagement in physical activity that in -
|
||
volves music and rhythm, like dancing, can be considered as beneficial
|
||
to health through multiple physiological mechanisms. These mecha -
|
||
nisms also include those that reduce stress and increase resilience.
|
||
5.3. Socio-cultural findings
|
||
Throughout the world, physical movement in the form of social
|
||
dance can be seen to be a powerful source and resource for health and
|
||
healing. Cross-culturally it is a buttress against the buffetings of socio-
|
||
cultural forces acting on or against the individual and community. We
|
||
thus suggest that it is a mechanism for not just resolving external diffi -
|
||
culties but for salving internal factors such as stress. Social dance is more
|
||
than an important source of meaning - "meaning in motion" as it is
|
||
coined by dance anthropologist Desmond (1997 , p. 3) in her collection
|
||
examining "the public display of bodily motion". Movement is, in itself,
|
||
transformative as a potent change agent: physical movement is dynamic
|
||
and diverse in its impact, particularly so in a socio-cultural context in the
|
||
fields of sport and physical education, and health. Whilst sport and
|
||
dance are closely related (cf. Dyck & Archetti, 2003 , pp. 10 – 11), these
|
||
disciplined and entrained practices differ in that the dance is less
|
||
competitive but more choreographed and aesthetic. Both can be,
|
||
nevertheless, drivers for energy allocation and intrasexual selection
|
||
( Longman et al., 2020 ), factors that are of particular importance during
|
||
times of insecurity, scarcity and difficulty - each of these being poten -
|
||
tially stressogenic.
|
||
Energy deficit during times of famine, for example, necessitates a
|
||
response such as migration, but such "energetic stress" can, if prolonged,
|
||
lead to dysfunctional stress responses within the body according to
|
||
Harrell et al. (2016) . In her study of Tamil refugees in Arctic Norway,
|
||
Gr Ø nseth (2010) found that migrants of conflict can become "hyper- -
|
||
consumers" of health services in the post-malaise of war trauma and
|
||
physical dissociation. Dance in the Diaspora can hence be considered a
|
||
restorative activity; this is demonstrated by Irish dancing events and the
|
||
annual St Patrick ’ s Day parades and festivals in urban areas of high Irish
|
||
immigration in the US such as Chicago, Boston, and New York (cf.
|
||
Conrad, 2015 ; Nagle, 2012 ).
|
||
More sociologically, Gotfrit (1988) presents social dancing in mod -
|
||
ern clubs and discos as physical movements that instil a tension between
|
||
resistance and self-regulation as middle-aged women temporarily dance
|
||
back to their youth, to their more liberated times, to their younger
|
||
bodies, to their pre-marital or family independence. Their "boogie night"
|
||
evenings are nights back in time, when ideologies of social reproduction
|
||
are played with, challenged and transgressed before being restored
|
||
when everyone goes back home. This is the pleasure of desire for and
|
||
with the body played with without consummation - a public expression
|
||
of sexuality without the sex. These are feminist contradictions about
|
||
corporeal resistance that serve a cathartic function as "safety valve", as
|
||
partial liberation and temporary de-stressing activity regardless of the
|
||
social dance (cf. Skinner, 2008 ).
|
||
In a health and healing context, Carapellotti et al. (2023) note how
|
||
because the social dance physical movement has a recursive dimension
|
||
to it - is patterned and repetitive - participants are able to expand and
|
||
grow in confidence from the patterns. This is important in a health
|
||
setting where diagnoses sometimes feature movement limiting,
|
||
confining conditions. For Carapellotti et al. (2023) , sufferers of multiple
|
||
sclerosis or Parkinson ’ s Disease are able to develop confidence in the
|
||
predictability of dance steps and the freedom of access to space around
|
||
them. Their worlds open outwards and expand through their experi -
|
||
ences on the social dance floor. Nadasen (2008) makes a similar point
|
||
writing about elderly female line dancers in Cape Town, South Africa:
|
||
her research revealed that physical activity serves as a buffer against
|
||
stress and trauma. It prevented social isolation and depression for
|
||
dancers who had lost their life partners. Yet, the physical movement
|
||
promotes more than an individual self-expression. This support struc -
|
||
ture fostered a new social consciousness and engagement in the com -
|
||
munity, even, in the dancers. This cuts across racial divides in a
|
||
post-apartheid environment, just as salsa dancing could breach the
|
||
ethno-national in Northern Ireland ( Skinner, 2007 ) and, for the dancers,
|
||
was considered to be "better than [pharmacological] medication"
|
||
( Nadasen, 2008 , p. 338) in the sense that the moving together had
|
||
become a panacea for many of their ills, "a buffer for trauma and stress"
|
||
( Nadasen, 2008 , p. 331).
|
||
Finally, in a comprehensive review of cultural dance and physical
|
||
education, Olvera (2008) associates ethnic world dances with the po -
|
||
tential to promote the health of young and old beyond quality of life
|
||
measures. Folklorico, salsa, African dance programmes can contribute to
|
||
weight loss, improved resting heart rates, cortisol reduction, the man -
|
||
agement of hypertension ( Guidetti et al., 2015 ). Olvera cites the work of
|
||
Harris (2007) in Sierra Leone: significantly, post-traumatic stress was
|
||
blunted in former child-soldiers interacting with each other and
|
||
engaging with their stories of atrocities - flash dances to resolve painful
|
||
flashbacks. The dancing promotes a locus of control within the body;
|
||
self-reliance that chips away at the distress of violence. It involves deep
|
||
engaged breathing that dampens the erratic arousal of the nervous
|
||
system; yawning and shrugging to relax and recover a new assertiveness;
|
||
and balance experiments with a partner to re-calibrate posture contra
|
||
repression and helplessness ( Harris, 2007 ). While not being the focus of
|
||
this review, these examples highlight how dancing solo or in partnership
|
||
or in groups, social in orientation or psychologically and emotionally
|
||
S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
|
||
11
|
||
## Page 12
|
||
driven can all help healing by integrating the senses: learning how to
|
||
regulate breathing whilst moving directly influences the vagal system
|
||
and hence its regulation of emotions. This self-awareness, or inter -
|
||
oception, is as much about stress prevention as it is stress management
|
||
(see Kiepe et al., 2012 ). Alpert (2011 , p. 156) makes similar points about
|
||
dancing "in the moment" as a counter to stress and high blood pressure
|
||
and how this can impact at a more fundamental level through the
|
||
autonomic nervous system.
|
||
6. Discussion
|
||
This review presents multidisciplinary insights into the core ele -
|
||
ments of dance that include music and rhythm, partnering and social
|
||
contact, as well as movement and physical activity (see also Fig. 1 ). It is
|
||
the first of its kind to simultaneously review neurobiological, psycho -
|
||
logical, and anthropological findings. The evidence we summarised is
|
||
diverse and in places the reasoning is new to the field of sport and ex -
|
||
ercise psychology. We thus want to highlight and integrate the main
|
||
conclusions that can be drawn from each of the three sections above.
|
||
Music and rhythm: Although very few studies looked at the effects
|
||
that music exerts when dancing, the existing evidence suggests that
|
||
certain positive effects, like the feeling of flow (a state deep absorption
|
||
and focused attention), only emerge when movement and music are
|
||
combined while dancing ( Bernardi et al., 2018 ). This finding is also in
|
||
line with exercise psychological evidence highlighting that music which
|
||
accompanies dance can result in a more positive activity experience and
|
||
a longer engagement in the activity ( Patania et al., 2020 ).
|
||
In comparison with evidence on dance and music, much more is
|
||
known about the effects of sole music listening that has been found to
|
||
promote coping and resilience in different ways. We summarised evi -
|
||
dence showing that music stimulates the brain ’ s reward system and that
|
||
the same neural mediators, like β -endorphins, are involved in both
|
||
music perception and stress responses ( Salimpoor et al., 2011 ; Veening
|
||
& Barendregt, 2015 ). Furthermore, music listening has been found to be
|
||
linked to increases in oxytocin levels and decreases in cortisol levels
|
||
( Ooishi et al., 2017 ). These neurobiological mechanisms can explain
|
||
why psychological studies find that music listening firstly reduces
|
||
negative psychological states caused by acute stressors, and secondly,
|
||
why it increases general health and well-being factors ( de Witte et al.,
|
||
2020 ; Labb ´e et al., 2007 ; Pelletier, 2004 ). That such effects were
|
||
observed in particular for music that individuals experience as relaxing
|
||
( Ghaderi et al., 2009 ; Linnemann et al., 2015 , 2016 ) is in line with the
|
||
empirical finding that this type of music increases electrical brain waves
|
||
that are associated with the state of relaxation ( Yehuda, 2011 ).
|
||
Furthermore, studies demonstrating particularly positive psychological
|
||
effects for certain types of rhythmic music ( Bernardi et al., 2018 ; Kim
|
||
et al., 2018 ) are in line with the unique and innate importance of beat
|
||
perception and synchronisation shown in neurobiological studies as well
|
||
as anthropological considerations ( Blacking, 1973 ; Ito et al., 2022 ).
|
||
Hominids are considered to have a propensity and predisposition for
|
||
sound pattern recognition and production, and music might cause
|
||
distinct positive psychological and social effects due to an important
|
||
societal and evolutionary function music bears ( Blacking, 1973 ; Cohen
|
||
et al., 2014 ; Ravignani & Madison, 2017 ). Anthropological scholars
|
||
argue that, especially in times of stress, music and acting in synchrony
|
||
might play fundamental roles in expressing and reinforcing innate
|
||
characteristics that predispose humans towards cooperation and social
|
||
interaction ( Ravignani, 2019 ; Wiltermuth & Heath, 2009 ). Music and
|
||
dance are regarded as aesthetic, non-utilitarian communication systems
|
||
that allow for group bonding as well as for self-expression ( Bond, 2008 ;
|
||
Hagen & Bryant, 2003 ).
|
||
These interdisciplinary considerations show that, for the field of
|
||
sport and exercise psychology, it is key to not regard music purely as a
|
||
form of exercise bi-product, entertainment, or cultural phenomenon, but
|
||
to understand that music is deeply ingrained in human biology and
|
||
psychology and can thus trigger manifold beneficial neurobiological,
|
||
physiological, psychological, and social responses.
|
||
Partnering and social contact: Several sport and exercise psycho -
|
||
logical studies found that dancing with a partner as well as exercising
|
||
with a partner resulted in even more positive psychological effects than
|
||
doing these activities alone ( Kanamori et al., 2016 ; Murcia et al., 2009 ;
|
||
Sackett-Fox et al., 2021 ). Likewise, listening to music in the presence of
|
||
others also seems to have beneficial stress regulatory effects ( Linnemann
|
||
et al., 2016 ). Considering that humans evolved as social and highly
|
||
affiliative species, these findings do not come as a surprise; corre -
|
||
spondingly, the ability to demonstrate attunement within the self and
|
||
between the self and the other in dance has been characterised as a
|
||
pathway to de-stressing ( Deans & Pini, 2022 ). Still, the role of social
|
||
factors has up to the present received surprisingly little attention in
|
||
psychological studies examining dance or the stress regulatory effects of
|
||
exercise in general.
|
||
When turning towards the field of stress research for further insights,
|
||
it becomes apparent that social support by a partner and/or stranger can
|
||
decrease acute physiological stress responses to an artificial stressor
|
||
( Ditzen et al., 2007 ; Kirschbaum et al., 1995 ). That this effect seems to
|
||
be in particular linked to physical contact ( Ditzen et al., 2007 ) aligns
|
||
with the conclusion that social touch acts as a stress buffer through
|
||
engaging the brain pathways and networks that regulate social attach -
|
||
ment via oxytocin and endorphin signalling ( Morrison, 2016 ). Review -
|
||
ing the socio-cultural meaning of touch, it becomes clear that touch is
|
||
intermediate and both tangible and intangible as a core perceptual ca -
|
||
pacity - it can be seen as a rebuttal to the buffetings of social stress upon
|
||
the individual ( Le Breton, 2017 ; Paterson, 2007 ). The social dancer thus
|
||
connects with the other, bodies merge, and the self emerges from
|
||
dancing with another. Facilitating spontaneous somatic rhythmical and
|
||
interpersonal synchronisation, dance is regarded to support emotional
|
||
release and social or cultural synchronisation ( Bollen, 2001 ; Samaritter,
|
||
2019 ). In line with these and previously summarised socio-cultural
|
||
considerations relating to music, psychological studies have shown
|
||
that the synchronisation with somebody else, especially when moving to
|
||
music, can give rise to positive feelings and social bonding ( Demos et al.,
|
||
2012 ; Tarr et al., 2015 ). Interestingly, neurobiological investigations
|
||
furthermore showed that oxytocin increased movement synchrony in
|
||
dancing pairs, highlighting the importance of oxytocin as the prosocial
|
||
hormone in social dance and corroborating the importance of social/ -
|
||
partner dance for resilience and coping ( Josef et al., 2019 ).
|
||
Movement and physical activity: Just like many other exercise ac -
|
||
tivities, engaging in dance movement has been found to impact stress
|
||
regulation in different ways, namely by reducing stressors and their
|
||
perceptions, by improving psycho-social resources, and by increasing
|
||
health and well-being levels (e.g., Burkhardt & Brennan, 2012 ; Holt- -
|
||
Lunstad et al., 2017 ; Liu et al., 2023 ; Zajenkowski et al., 2015 ). These
|
||
psychological findings align with neuro-biological and physiological
|
||
evidence showing that physical exercise enhances endorphins and
|
||
dopamine release, modulating the activity of reward-related neural
|
||
networks and the HPA axis ( Gorrell et al., 2022 ; Molina-Hidalgo et al.,
|
||
2023 ; Takai et al., 2007 ; Veening & Barendregt, 2015 ). Benefits related
|
||
to engagement in dance have been found to relate to a variety of factors,
|
||
e.g., meaningfulness, creativity, and physical abilities ( Quiroga Murcia
|
||
et al., 2010 ); looking at the importance of movement from a
|
||
socio-cultural perspective, it becomes likewise clear that social dance is
|
||
a powerful resource for health and healing. Dance movement is trans -
|
||
formative and restorative as it allows for self-expression as well as for
|
||
confidence-building when movement patterns are repetitive and pre -
|
||
dictable ( Carapellotti et al., 2023 ; Desmond, 1997 ; Nadasen, 2008 ).
|
||
Dancing enables the dancer to self-regulate, to connect with their past
|
||
and cultural roots, and to foster social connection, even across social
|
||
divides, by moving together ( Gotfrit, 1988 ; McGoldrick, 2018 ; Nadasen,
|
||
2008 ; Skinner, 2007 ).
|
||
In sport and exercise psychological studies, this broader, socio-
|
||
cultural meaning of movement has received only very little attention.
|
||
Considering that several studies show that stress regulatory effects differ
|
||
S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
|
||
12
|
||
## Page 13
|
||
for different types of movements and exercise ( Bernardi et al., 2018 ;
|
||
Gerber et al., 2014 ), and that beneficial changes are not automatically
|
||
linked to changes in fitness levels ( Vrinceanu et al., 2019 ), a narrow
|
||
focus on typical exercise characteristics, such as the intensity level,
|
||
might hinder new insights. Current meta-analyses on the superior effects
|
||
of dance as well as research comparing effects of exercise and dance
|
||
interventions in patients with Parkinson’s disease highlight the impor -
|
||
tance of rhythmical dance movements for stress regulation ( Earhart,
|
||
2009 ; Fong Yan et al., 2024 ). Yet when drawing this conclusion, it needs
|
||
to be acknowledged that many of the reviewed studies that investigated
|
||
the stress regulatory role of dance movement also involved musi -
|
||
c/rhythm and/or partnering/social contact.
|
||
6.1. Future research recommendations
|
||
At the beginning of this review, we emphasised the importance of
|
||
gaining better insights into the stress-regulative effects of specific types of
|
||
exercise, especially given the significance of exercise and resilience and
|
||
coping for health. The sport and exercise psychological evidence in the
|
||
field of stress regulation is generally limited by a shortage of studies that
|
||
compare dance activities with other types of physical activities; and by a
|
||
mostly undifferentiated, generalised use of the term “exercise”. Most
|
||
studies examine specific aerobic activities like running, or use exercise
|
||
categories like aerobic vs anaerobic or moderate vs. vigorous physical
|
||
activity ( Klaperski & Fuchs, 2021 ; Meyer et al., 2021 ). Other charac -
|
||
teristics, e.g., whether activities have a social component, involve touch,
|
||
or whether they involve music, are being neglected. This narrow focus
|
||
on the characteristics relevant for movement science, e.g., the intensity
|
||
of an activity, likely hinders researchers in understanding what char -
|
||
acteristics of an activity cause an observed effect.
|
||
Our review on the specific stress-regulative effects of dance has
|
||
highlighted numerous insights that provide support for dance as a
|
||
unique stress regulatory activity. However, it also revealed points for
|
||
which currently only limited evidence regarding the effects of dance on
|
||
resilience and coping is available. The theme of resilience, as spanning
|
||
across the fields of psychology and neuroscience, is clearly among the
|
||
areas warranting further original research to build a body of data and
|
||
evidence available for translation into interventions in healthcare (the
|
||
aspect exceeding the remit of this review but systematically dealt with
|
||
by Fong Yan et al., 2024 ). Other areas that call for further investigations
|
||
include the exploration of the role of music within the realm of dance,
|
||
with a focus on its enduring impacts over time. Furthermore, delving
|
||
into the intricacies of rhythm and its relationship with dance, inde -
|
||
pendent of musical accompaniment, presents a promising avenue for
|
||
future scholarly inquiry. Generally, a more specific investigation of
|
||
stress-regulative effects of different movement types, if possible also
|
||
dissecting movement from other characteristics like music or social
|
||
contact, is very warranted to gain more meaningful insights.
|
||
There is likewise a need for more emphasis on the gender effects on
|
||
stress responses in the context of social dance, and for better under -
|
||
standing the influence of dance on individual characteristics, like for
|
||
example pessimism/a sense of helplessness and optimism/proficiency in
|
||
adaptive coping. Lastly, we agree with Fong Yan et al. (2024) who
|
||
highlighted several methodological issues, such as the short follow up
|
||
periods and low quality of study designs. Those limitations also apply to
|
||
many of the studies that were reviewed in the present paper.
|
||
6.2. Strengths and limitations of the current review
|
||
The present review has strengths as well as limitations. Its main
|
||
strengths are its interdisciplinarity and its sole focus on dance as a
|
||
specific form of exercise. This allowed us to, for the first time, explore
|
||
several characteristics of dance and their links to stress regulation in
|
||
depth, leading to new insights. At the same time, we must acknowledge
|
||
that it was not possible to review all relevant dance characteristics
|
||
( Christensen et al., 2021 ) considering the length of the present review.
|
||
Themes that this review has not dealt with in depth are for example:
|
||
communication ( Hanna, 2006 ), the role of body awareness and somatic
|
||
practice ( Deans & Pini, 2022 ), creative learning and inner personal
|
||
change ( Buck & Snook, 2020 ; Horwitz et al., 2022 ), the development of
|
||
emotional competencies ( Borowski, 2023 ), the role of posture, and the
|
||
expression of emotions that have been positively or negatively modified
|
||
by recreational dance ( Alfredsson Olsson & Heikkinen, 2019 ).
|
||
Another important limitation regards the methodology of the review.
|
||
We initially aimed to use a systematic literature search strategy, yet,
|
||
most of the identified publications were not of direct relevance (see
|
||
Method above and the Supplementary Online Material). At the same time
|
||
the systematic review criteria and a sole focus on “dance” as keyword led
|
||
us to missing many discipline-specific literature sources. We resolved
|
||
this problem by using an iterative and purposeful subjective literature
|
||
search approach; however, its breadth meant that a systematic exami -
|
||
nation of all sources was not viable. Using this iterative search process
|
||
and the author team’s existing literature collections allowed us to pro -
|
||
vide a rich and meaningful summary of the evidence. It is however
|
||
important to acknowledge that no comprehensive literature screening
|
||
and review was conducted and that the search cannot easily be repli -
|
||
cated. This means that the current narrative review bears a risk for bias,
|
||
as relevant publications might have not been included and other re -
|
||
searchers might have considered other sources and interpretations,
|
||
coming to different conclusions
|
||
5
|
||
( Sukhera, 2022 ).
|
||
7. Conclusion
|
||
In conclusion, this multidisciplinary narrative review of the benefi -
|
||
cial effects of dance on coping, resilience, and stress offers unique in -
|
||
sights from a psychological, neurobiological, and anthropological
|
||
perspective. We hope our interdisciplinary approach has not only
|
||
enhanced the understanding of the beneficial effects of dance but also
|
||
underscored the richness of integrating diverse perspectives to explore
|
||
complex phenomena in the realm of human health and well-being. By
|
||
examining the intricate interplay between mind, body and brain, and
|
||
culture, this narrative review widened disciplinary horizons and shed
|
||
light on the diverse mechanisms through which dance positively impacts
|
||
individuals’ abilities to cope with stress. Various empirical psychologi -
|
||
cal studies showed that dance and music can promote coping and foster
|
||
resilience. Neurobiological research highlighted the rewarding and
|
||
stress-reducing effects of dance and its unique characteristics, demon -
|
||
strating its ability to modulate brain regions involved in the stress
|
||
response. Anthropological insights underscored the cultural significance
|
||
of dance as a universal form of human expression, offering a communal
|
||
space for bonding, healing, and collective coping strategies. Together,
|
||
these perspectives emphasise the profound potential of dance as an
|
||
embodied practice that addresses coping, resilience, and stress at mul -
|
||
tiple levels of the human experience. So get up and dance your stress
|
||
away.
|
||
CRediT authorship contribution statement
|
||
Sandra Klaperski-van der Wal (Psychology): Writing – review &
|
||
editing, Writ ing – original draft, Project administration, Methodology,
|
||
Investigation, Conceptualization. Jonathan Skinner (Social
|
||
5
|
||
Considering the flagged risk for bias and the collaboration as an interdis -
|
||
ciplinary team, it would have been beneficial to, notwithstanding the adoption
|
||
of an iterative, purposeful review approach, create notes of all searches and to
|
||
keep short discussion records; regrettably, we have not made use of this op -
|
||
portunity that was brought to our attention in the peer review process.
|
||
Following recommendations for narrative reviews, we did however describe all
|
||
key components of our review as transparently as possible, hoping that this
|
||
enables the reader to critically appraise the overall quality of our review
|
||
( Baethge et al., 2019 ; Sukhera, 2022 ).
|
||
S. Klaperski-van der Wal et al. Psychology of Sport & Exercise 78 (2025) 102823
|
||
13
|
||
## Page 14
|
||
Anthropology): Writing – review & edit- ing, Writing – original draft,
|
||
Methodology, Investigation, Conceptual- ization. Jolanta Opacka-Juf -
|
||
fry (Neuroscience/Physiology): Writing – review & editing, Writing –
|
||
original draft, Methodology, Investigation, Conceptualization. Kristina
|
||
Pfeffer: Writing – review & editing, Writing – original draft, Resources,
|
||
Methodology, Investigation.
|
||
Declaration of competing interest
|
||
The authors declare that they have no known competing financial
|
||
interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence
|
||
the work reported in this paper.
|
||
Appendix A. Supplementary data
|
||
Supplementary data to this article can be found online at https://doi.
|
||
org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2025.102823 .
|
||
Data availability
|
||
No data was used for the research described in the article.
|
||
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14
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||
## Page 15
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de Witte, M., Spruit, A., van Hooren, S., Moonen, X., & Stams, G.-J. (2020). Effects of
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