Consuming lavender tea for 14 days is linked to a reduction in symptoms of misophonia in adult patients, as well as reduced depression, anxiety, and anger, a new study shows.
Ever feel like the sound of someone chewing, a ticking clock, or a neighbor’s leaf blower is actually a personal attack?
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Person eating a mandarin Most of us can relate to feeling uncomfortable when someone scrapes their nails down a chalkboard. For ...
Nails on a chalkboard. Loud breathing. Sneezing. These sounds can often be irritating and leave ears ringing with discomfort. But for people with misophonia, a decreased tolerance for specific sounds ...
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Misophonia: Having strong negative reactions to certain sounds is linked to mental inflexibility
Hearing involves more than just the ears—it's intimately connected to how we think and feel. A recent study has shed light on the possible links between hearing, emotion, and cognition by ...
This past year there has been significant advancement in misophonia research. The research is more cohesive and reflects a greater understanding of the underlying mechanisms of misophonia, as well as ...
Misophonia is not a psychiatric disorder, and there certainly aren’t any scientific studies that equate misophonia with violence. As many of you may know, Emory University otolaryngology professor ...
Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine are conducting a study to examine the symptomatic characteristics of misophonia and anxiety in children and adolescents. Misophonia is a condition in which ...
A new study reveals the motor basis for misophonia, a condition that causes exceptionally negative responses to sounds such as chewing, providing an insight into new potential treatments. Sitting down ...
If you’ve ever had a visceral reaction to certain sounds such as sniffing, coughing or slurping, you might have misophonia — but you’re far from being the only one. A new study published in the ...
While most people can relate to feeling uncomfortable when someone scrapes their nails down a chalkboard, those suffering from misophonia can have an equally intense reaction to sounds like slurping, ...
Most of us can relate to feeling uncomfortable when someone scrapes their nails down a chalkboard. For those with the condition misophonia, sounds like slurping, snoring, breathing, and chewing can ...
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