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Music and Sleep

A Scientific Perspective

  • 1st Edition - April 30, 2026
  • Latest edition
  • Editors: Kira Vibe Jespersen, Björn Rasch
  • Language: English

Music and Sleep: A Scientific Perspective presents a comprehensive discussion on the topic of music and sleep. The book brings these disciplines together, providing a solid backgr… Read more

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Description

Music and Sleep: A Scientific Perspective presents a comprehensive discussion on the topic of music and sleep. The book brings these disciplines together, providing a solid background, recent developments, and a deeper understanding of their synthesis. Of special interest are technical advances that have made sleep recordings, music manipulation, and sleep stimulation more accessible in recent years. Notably, sleep disturbances are an increasing problem in society, highlighting the importance of developing low-risk and cost-effective treatments. Healthcare professionals looking to integrate novel information on music and sleep to increase their patients' wellbeing need look no further than this book.

Music is widely used as sleep aid, but the exact neural mechanisms of the sleep-enhancing function of music are not fully clear. New research output includes exciting breakthroughs, hypotheses, and discoveries in both of these areas. However, since research fields on the neuroscientific mechanisms of music and those of sleep have not traditionally overlapped, this book fills in the gaps.

Key features

  • Elucidates on the most critical concepts, definitions, theories, neural mechanisms, and implications of music and sleep for overall health
  • Focuses on the methods of using music to improve sleep for children, healthy participants, the elderly, and patients with sleep disorders
  • Includes reviews and analyses of recent experimental findings from research, examining the extent to which music and sounds can be processed during sleep and the developmental changes and neural correlates of sleep

Readership

Researchers in basic sleep research, sleep medicine, music neuroscience, musicology, music technology, music therapy and psychology Graduate students in musicology, music technology, music therapy, psychology, cognitive science, medicine and neuroscience Clinicians in the fields of sleep medicine, psychology, psychiatry and music therapy

Table of contents

Section I: A general introduction to music and sleep

1. Talking about music
​Miriam Akkermann

2.
Music and the brain
​Peter Vuust

3.
Music and health
​Kira Vibe Jespersen

4.
What is sleep?
​Michelle George, Thomas Andrillon

5. What is healthy sleep, and why do we need it?
​Sandrine Baselgia, Albrecht Vorster

6. Music and sleep in history
​Charles Burnett

7. Machine learning at the intersection of music and sleep research
​Samuel Morgan, Jonathan Stumber, Dirk Pflüger

Section II: Music for sleep

8. Sleep, baby, sleep: Lullabies in infancy and childhood
​Meyha Chhatwal, Angela Dou, Ana Luiza Miranda Guimaraes, Laura K. Cirelli

9. The use of music as a sleep strategy in the general population
​Silvia Genovese, Kira Vibe Jespersen

10. Music as a non-pharmacological sleep aid in older adults
​Darina V. Petrovsky, Miranda V. McPhillips, Junxin Li, Osborn Owusu Ansah

11. Clinical uses of music for sleep improvement
​Kira Vibe Jespersen

12. Sleep music—Which music do people use for sleep?
​Rebecca Jane Scarratt, Kira Vibe Jespersen

13. Interactive sonic interventions for sleep
​Abhishek Choubey, Sandra Pauletto

Section III: Music during sleep

14. Auditory perception during sleep
​Andrea Sanchez-Corzo, Thomas Schreiner

15. The effects of sound stimulation on slow waves
​Tinke van Buijtene, Perfecto Herrera, Sergi Jorda

16. Perception of harmony in sleep and the role of individual preferences
​Anna Wick, Annika Partmann, Björn Rasch

17. Perception of musical rhythm during sleep
​Rebeca Sifuentes Ortega, Philippe Peigneux

18. Music in dreams: Methodology, findings, and future directions
​Sandrine Baselgia, Björn Rasch

19. Sleep disturbances induced by noise, sounds, and music
​Michael G. Smith

Section IV: Sleep as music

20. Sound asleep: The hidden music of sleep patterns
​Milton Mermikides

21. Improving sleep by listening to your own brainwaves
​Alain Destexhe

22. Music and sleep research project: Sleep data as techno music
​Stephen Jon Rush

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Published: April 30, 2026
  • Language: English

About the editors

KJ

Kira Vibe Jespersen

Kira Vibe Jespersen is Associate Professor at Center for Music in the Brain at Aarhus University, Denmark. With a unique interdisciplinary background in psychology, neuroscience and music therapy, her research focuses on clinical applications of music with a particular interest in the effect of music on sleep and the use of music for insomnia. In her research, she evaluates both the effects of music interventions and the potential neurophysiological mechanisms underlying these effects. In addition, she is a trained musician.
Affiliations and expertise
Associate Professor, Center for Music in the Brain, Aarhus University, Denmark

BR

Björn Rasch

Björn Rasch is Professor of Cognitive Biopsychology and Methods at the University of Fribourg, Switzerland. He has been actively involved in basic sleep research for over 25 years, and has published in leading scientific journals such as Science, Nature Neuroscience, PNAS and Physiological Reviews. He has edited and written several books on memory consolidation, hypnosis research and sleep. His research focus is on sleep, cognition and health, and he has completed many studies involving the presentation of auditory stimuli during sleep. Recently, he has started conducting several studies on music processing during sleep. In addition, he is trained in music theory and is an active musician.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor of Cognitive Biopsychology and Methods, University of Fribourg, Switzerland