Showing posts with label benefits of music lessons on cognition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label benefits of music lessons on cognition. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

REPOST: New Evidence of Mental Benefits From Music Training

Music helps by mentally stimulating the brain. This post from Psmag.com features a study that proves how learning music helps children achieve academic excellence.
Image Source: psmag.com
 
As we’ve reported
, a large body of research has noted a link between music education and higher test scores. But precisely why learning an instrument would have a positive impact on academic achievement has never been clear.
A new study from Boston Children’s Hospital provides a possible answer. It reports musical training may promote the development and maintenance of a key set of mental skills.
These executive functions, which are coordinated in the brain’s frontal lobe, “allow for planned, controlled behavior,” writes a research team led by Harvard University scholar Nadine Gaab. They enable us to manage our time and attention, organize our thoughts, and regulate our behavior—abilities that are crucial to success in school, as well as later life.
In an experiment featuring two separate groups of test subjects—one consisting of children, the other of adults—Gaab and her colleagues discovered a link between early musical training and heightened executive functioning. This, they argue, could explain “the previously reported links between musical training and enhanced cognitive skills.”
In the online journal PLoS One, they describe a study featuring 30 adults between the ages of 18 and 35 (15 working musicians, and 15 non-musicians), and 27 children between the ages of nine and 12 (15 of whom had at least two years of musical training).
All performed a series of tasks to measure various facets of cognitive ability, including verbal fluency, mental processing speed, and working memory—the crucial ability to hold several ideas in your mind at the same time. In addition, the children performed a separate mental task while their brains were scanned using fMRI technology.
The key result: “Children and adults with extensive musical training show enhanced performance on a number of executive-function constructs compared to non-musicians,” the researchers write, “especially for cognitive flexibility, working memory, and processing speed.”
The musically trained children showed “heightened activation in traditional executive-function regions” of the brain during a task-switching exercise, they report, along with “enhanced performance on measures of verbal fluency.”
Gaab and her colleagues caution that more research will be needed to show causation. The chicken-and-egg question has been raised in the past in regard to music and the brain, and these results don’t definitively answer it: It’s possible that kids with higher levels of executive functioning are more likely to be drawn to studying music.
Longitudinal studies, measuring executive functioning before music training begins, will presumably be required to definitively answer that question. But the very real possibility that music training boosts executive functioning provides another argument for the importance of music education.
“Replacing music programs with reading or math instruction in our nation’s school curricula in order to boost standardized test scores,” the researchers warn, “may actually lead to deficient skills in other cognitive areas.”
To learn more about the benefits of music, follow Mark Begelman on Twitter.

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Study: Childhood music lessons benefit adulthood cognition

Image Source: hiddenlighthouse.wordpress.com

Music relaxes the body, uplifts the spirit, and motivates the inner will.

It should not be surprising to know that music provides these significant benefits. But, more than the ability to soothe, uplift, and motivate, music may actually boost the brain. And when children take up music lessons early on, it may boost brain response well into adult life, reveals a study in the Journal of Neuroscience.

Image Source: npr.org

The scientists evaluated 45 healthy adults with ages ranging from 18 to 31. The results suggest that those who received formal music training as children have stronger brainstem responses to sound than those who never experienced music instruction. There is also an effect on how early musical training stopped. All in all, the results imply that cognitive developments boosted by musical training in childhood are significantly preserved through adulthood.

Furthermore, a short period of music lessons in childhood, say at the age of three years, alters the nervous system that persists in adulthood even after training. However, regular and continuous lessons early in life correlate to a better cognitive function in adulthood.

Image Source: littlewingmn.com

Parents have to realize that beyond the ability to emotionally console or make children happy, playing musical instruments nourishes the mind. Injecting music into children’s lives can go a long way. As the great philosopher Plato put it: “I would teach children music, physics, and philosophy; but most importantly music, for the patterns in music and all the arts are the keys to learning.”

Mark Begelman
and Markee Music open their doors to children to bring music into their lives. Know more of the studio’s facilities and services by visiting this Facebook page.