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Therapeutic Listening

Therapeutic Listening™

Therapeutic Listening™ is a sensory integration auditory modality that uses electronically altered sounds to impact the nervous system.  It is a developed protocol incorporating the use of compact discs for use at home, school, and clinical settings.  Therapeutic Listening™ is used in conjunction with other sensory integration approaches to provide information for the organization of movement, learning, and behavior.

Listening

Listening is a function of the entire brain; when we listen, we listen with the whole body.  Listening is the process of detecting sound and organizing and integrating it for use with information from other senses.  “Listening is the key in all our overall ability to orient to the people, places, and things in everyday life” (Frick, 2006).  Listening difficulties such as the inability to accurately perceive, process, and respond to sounds are often a part of other sensory, motor, attention, and learning difficulties affecting a large number of children and adults.

Hearing Versus Listening

Hearing

Listening

How Therapeutic Listening™ Works

The music used as part of the Therapeutic Listening™ protocol is specifically passed through a filter to allow certain high frequencies to be accentuated and low frequencies to be muted.  By using the vestibular-cochlear mechanism in the inner ear, the brain becomes trained to filter out low frequencies of sounds and tune in higher frequencies, such as the human voice.

Benefits of Therapeutic Listening [1]

Modulation/Self-Regulation

Postural Tone/Postural Attention

Motor Control

Spatial-Temporal Organization

Communication

Frick S. (2000).  Listening with the Whole Body