How music training boosts learning
July 21st, 2010 - 2:32 pm ICT by ANILondon, July 21 (ANI): Musical training prompts neural connections in the brain, which in turn prime people for other aspects of human communication like language, speech, memory, attention and even vocal emotion, revealed a scientific review.
The data-driven review by Northwestern University researchers pulls together converging research from the scientific literature linking musical training to learning that spills over to other communication skills.
Lead author Nina Kraus, said that the explosion of research in recent years focusing on the effects of music training on the nervous system, including the studies in the review, have strong implications for education.
Scientists use the term neuroplasticity to describe the brain’s ability to adapt and change as a result of training and experience over the course of a person’s life.
An active engagement with musical sounds not only enhances neuroplasticity, but also enables the nervous system to provide the stable scaffolding of meaningful patterns so important to learning, she said.
“The brain is unable to process all of the available sensory information from second to second, and thus must selectively enhance what is relevant,” Nature quoted Kraus as saying.
Playing an instrument primes the brain to choose what is relevant in a complex process that may involve reading or remembering a score, timing issues and coordination with other musicians.
“A musician’s brain selectively enhances information-bearing elements in sound. In a beautiful interrelationship between sensory and cognitive processes, the nervous system makes associations between complex sounds and what they mean,” said Kraus.
The efficient sound-to-meaning connections are important not only for music but for other aspects of communication, she said.
The researchers showed, for example, that musicians are more successful than non-musicians in learning to incorporate sound patterns for a new language into words.
Children who are musically trained show stronger neural activation to pitch changes in speech and have a better vocabulary and reading ability than children who did not receive music training.
And musicians trained to hear sounds embedded in a rich network of melodies and harmonies are primed to understand speech in a noisy background.
They exhibit both enhanced cognitive and sensory abilities that give them a distinct advantage for processing speech in challenging listening environments compared with non-musicians.
Children with learning disorders are particularly vulnerable to the deleterious effects of background noise, according to the article.
“Music training seems to strengthen the same neural processes that often are deficient in individuals with developmental dyslexia or who have difficulty hearing speech in noise,” said Kraus.
The study is published in Nature Reviews Neuroscience. (ANI)
- Musical brains easily pick out speech from background noise - Nov 14, 2009
- How noise affects nervous system's ability to transcribe sounds key to reading skills - Jul 14, 2009
- Music helps kids process speech more accurately - Feb 23, 2010
- Musicians'' ''well-tuned'' brains can identify emotion - Mar 04, 2009
- Childhood music lessons keep ageing brains sharper - Apr 21, 2011
- Music 'boosts kids' brain development' - Feb 21, 2010
- Music lessons may boost a person's ability to hear in noise - Aug 18, 2009
- Video games may boost stroke recovery - Apr 08, 2011
- New study sheds light on brain's inherent ability to focus on learning - Dec 09, 2010
- Why dyslexic kids face difficulties in distinguishing speech from noise - Nov 12, 2009
- Autistic brains 'focus more on visual skills' - Apr 05, 2011
- Now, a bionic speech enhancement system to cut unwanted 'white noise' - Sep 10, 2010
- Motherhood alters brain functions - Oct 25, 2011
- Little babies can make out when you're sad - Jul 01, 2011
- How neurons in the brain decide how to transmit information - Mar 26, 2011
Tags: aspects of communication, cognitive processes, communication skills, human communication, interrelationship, kraus, language speech, meaningful patterns, music training, musical sounds, nervous system, neural connections, neuroplasticity, new language, northwestern university researchers, primes, relevant nature, scaffolding, sound patterns, vocal emotion