Research Symposium

23rd annual Undergraduate Research Symposium, April 6, 2023

Isabella Munoz She/Her Poster Session 4: 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm/ Poster #4


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BIO


Hi! My name is Isabella and I'm currently a psychology major here at FSU, though I am thinking about changing it to behavioral neurscience. I live in south florida and enjoy going to the beach and reading during my free time. My reserach interests revolve around mental health and trying to find solutions to various questions regarding mental health in students. Some of my hobbies consist of playing the piano, sports, going out with friends and baking. My plans for the future are to go to medical school to either pursue psychiatry, anethesiology, or neurosurgery.

The Slow Regard of Silent Things: Building Mental and Emotional Resilience in Dancers

Authors: Isabella Munoz, Casey Copeland
Student Major: Psychology
Mentor: Casey Copeland
Mentor's Department: Dance
Mentor's College: School of Dance
Co-Presenters: Rebecca Chuhak, Alana Moses, Sydney Neibert, & Samantha Randall

Abstract


This study evaluated an educational intervention targeted at building mental and emotional resilience in dancers and documents the prevalence of mental health stress in a university dance environment.  Five BFA dance majors completed the intervention: six modules in an application developed by a clinician who works with dancers and one-hour weekly meetings. This study observed the influence of mental resilience training on behaviors relevant to dance performance. Training was evaluated using a multiple-baseline-across-dancers experimental design with secondary measures of the RAND Mental Health Inventory, a Mental Health Knowledge Base Questionnaire, and Social Validity ratings. Results show targeted behaviors improved for every dancer who completed training with mean improvement of 50%. Scores on the RAND and Knowledge Base questionnaire improved by averages of six and thirteen points respectively. Results support previous research, corroborating that dancers are facing mental stress. Findings also suggest that completing six application-based, individually coached, weekly mental resilience training sessions improved the quality of pre-professional dancers' interactions with their training environments and self-reported mental health levels. This study was run as a systematic replication of the study done in the 2021-2022 school year with similar results expected. 

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Keywords: dance, mental health, well-being