ミソフォニア・マイルストーンタイムライン
Special thanks to Cris Edwards and Dr. Zachary Rosenthal for their feedback and suggestions.
For links to some of the latest research, check the soQuietミソフォニア研究ページ, which keeps a running list of published research, listed in reverse chronological order and separated into disciplines.
To sign up for a mailing list to receive updates about misophonia events and resources, visit the soQuietホームページ。
Text included in the timeline image:
Misophonia is not a new phenomenon: people have lived with misophonia long before it had a name. Thankfully, research and advocacy efforts have dramatically ramped up over the past few decades.
2001 - The term “misophonia”—literally “hatred of sound”—was coined by Dr. Pawel J. Jastreboff and Dr. Margaret M. Jastreboff, though, as it does not accurately represent the symptoms, it was not the only name proposed for the disorder.
2008 - The Duke Sensory Processing and Emotion Regulation Program was founded, which would later become the Duke Center for Misophonia and Emotion Regulation (CMER) in 2019. CMER supports misophonia research and education initiatives.
2011 - The article “When a Chomp or a Slurp Is a Trigger for Outrage” by Joyce Cohen was published in The New York Times, spreading awareness of misophonia to many people and giving those with misophonia a way to contextualize their symptoms.
2013 - ミソフォニア協会は、研究者、臨床医、ミソフォニア患者、およびその家族が集まるプログラムである、最初の年次ミソフォニア コンベンションを主催しました。ミソフォニアに関する最初の査読付き研究が発表されました。
2017 - “The Brain Basis for Misophonia,” a study by Dr. Sukhbinder Kumar and colleagues at Newcastle University, found that people with misophonia had abnormal functioning of the anterior insular cortex, further validating misophonia as a distinct disorder.
2019 年 - soQuiet は、2021 年まで 501(c)(3) 非営利団体ではありませんでしたが、ミソフォニアの影響を受ける人々や家族に無料のイベントやリソースを提供するために設立されました。ミソフォニア研究基金も開始され、それ以来1,000万ドル以上の助成金を提供してきました。
2020 - ミソフォニアポッドキャスト、 hosted by Adeel Ahmad, posted its first episode of now more than 200. In the first randomized controlled trial examining a treatment, Jager et al. found that cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) had both short-term and long-term efficacy.
2022 - In the same year that the misophonia section of the Frontiers in Neuroscience journal was created, “The Consensus Definition for Misophonia: A Delphi Study” was published, allowing for more cohesive research and clinical conversations about misophonia.
2023 - Sounds like Misophonia: How to Stop Small Noises from Causing Extreme Reactions ジェーン・グレゴリー博士とアディール・アフマドによるミソフォニアに関する最初の本は、大手出版社から出版された最初の本となりました。
2024 - Over 950 people attended soQuiet’s second annual Conversations About Research for Everyone (CARE) event, making it the most-attended advocacy event for misophonia to date.
As awareness spreads and research continues to grow, living with misophonia will get easier. Know that your participation, whether merely a viewer of this graphic or as a person with lived experience, helps that kind of change happen.

