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April 29th, 2009 · Announcements
Study suggests that musical training can shape brain development!
April 28th, 2009 · Music and the Brain
Commentary from Lutz Jäncke (Thanks to Dr. Ellen Taliaferro for sharing this study with me)
This study supports my own interpretation of the brain’s capability for experience-dependent influences
on brain anatomy and function. In concrete, this study demonstrates that 6-year-old children receiving
instrumental musical training for 15 months not only learned to play their musical instrument but also
showed changed anatomical features in brain areas known to be involved in the control of playing a
musical instrument. This is the first longitudinal study demonstrating brain plasticity in children in the
context of learning to play a musical instrument.
One of the major questions in cognitive neuroscience is whether the human brain can be shaped by experience.
In order to examine use-dependent plasticity of the human brain, mostly cross-sectional studies are undertaken
comparing subjects with specific skills with appropriate control groups. A classical approach is to compare highly
skilled musicians, sportsmen, or subjects with other exceptional skills (e.g. synesthesia) with control subjects
using neuroanatomical and neurophysiological measures (please see refs [1] and [2], on which I am an author,
and refs [3,4]). Using this approach, several anatomical differences have been identified which can be attributed
to the specific training influences these particular subjects have experienced. However, although these cross-
sectional studies have uncovered several important findings, cross-sectional approaches are not valid enough to
attribute the discovered between-group differences entirely to different learning influences. The only experimental
approach which is suitable to more validly identify experience-dependent influences in humans is the
longitudinal experimental approach. Using this approach, the authors of this paper have examined 31 children
(with a mean age of 6 years) during the course of a 15-month period. Fifteen of these kids received musical
instrument training (a weekly half-hour training outside the school system) while the 16 remaining kids did not
attend these classes. However, all kids received the regular music lessons in their school, including playing with
drums and bells. Thus, the 15 kids receiving keyboard lessons only differed in this particular feature. It turned
out that these kids showed increased brain volumes in several brain areas after 15 months. Most of these brain
areas are part of the cortical motor system. There were also structural changes in the auditory system. Taken
together, this study is the first longitudinal study in children demonstrating structural changes in children
receiving instrumental musical training. Thus, this study sheds new light on the plasticity of the human brain.
Faculty of 1000 Medicine: Evaluations, Dissents and Author responses for: [Hyde KL et al. Musical training
shapes structural brain development. J Neurosci 2009 Mar 11 29 (10) :3019-25] 2009 Apr 1.
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Your Brain on Bach
April 27th, 2009 · Music and the Brain
Your Brain on Bach
Musicians really do think differently than the rest of us. Vanderbilt psychologists have found that professionally trained musicians more effectively use a creative technique called divergent thinking, and use both the left and right sides of their frontal cortex more heavily than the average person.
Previous studies of creativity have focused on divergent thinking—the ability to come up with new solutions to open-ended, multifaceted problems. Highly creative individuals often display more divergent thinking than their less creative counterparts.
Vanderbilt researchers Crystal Gibson, Bradley Folley and Sohee Park recruited 20 classical music students from the Vanderbilt Blair School of Music and 20 non-musicians from a Vanderbilt introductory psychology course.
“We were interested in how individuals who are naturally creative look at problems that are best solved by thinking ‘out of the box,’” says Folley, MA’02, PhD’06, a postdoctoral fellow. “We studied musicians because creative thinking is part of their daily experience, and we found that there were qualitative differences in the types of answers they gave to problems and in their associated brain activity.”
The two groups were matched based on age, gender, education, sex, high school grades and SAT scores. The musicians each had at least eight years of training and played a variety of instruments, including piano, woodwind, string and percussion. Overall, researchers found that the musicians had higher IQ scores than the non-musicians, supporting recent studies that intensive musical training is associated with an elevated IQ score.
Research subjects were shown a variety of household objects and asked to make up new functions for them, and were also given a written word association test. Musicians provided more correct responses than non-musicians on the word association test—something the researchers believe may be attributed to enhanced verbal ability among musicians. Musicians also suggested more novel uses for the household objects than their non-musical counterparts.
In a second experiment the two groups again were asked to identify new uses for everyday objects, but this time they also were asked to perform a basic control task while activity in their prefrontal lobes was monitored using a brain-scanning technique called near-infrared spectroscopy, or NIRS.
“When we measured subjects’ prefrontal cortical activity while completing the alternate-uses task, we found that trained musicians had greater activity in both sides of their frontal lobes,” Folley says. “Because we equated musicians and non-musicians in terms of their performance, this finding was not simply due to the fact that the musicians invented more uses; there seems to be a qualitative difference in how they think about this information.”
One possible explanation for the musicians’ elevated use of both brain hemispheres is that many musicians must be able to use both hands independently to play their instruments.
“Musicians may be particularly good at efficiently accessing and integrating competing information from both hemispheres,” Folley says. “Instrumental musicians often integrate different melodic lines with both hands into a single musical piece, and they have to be very good at simultaneously reading the musical symbols, which are like left-hemisphere-based language, and integrating the written music with their own interpretation, which has been linked to the right hemisphere.”
Folley and Park are investigators in the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Research on Human Development. Park is a professor of psychology and psychiatry and a member of the Center for Integrative and Cognitive Neuroscience. Gibson, BA’04, was an undergraduate student and research assistant in the psychology department at the time of the study. Their research, which was partially supported by a Vanderbilt University Discovery Grant, will appear in the journal Brain and Cognition.
Having surgery? When do you mention using music to your surgeon?
April 24th, 2009 · Music and Surgery
How soon should you talk with doctor?
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Susan Boyle continues to capture the media attention
April 24th, 2009 · Music in the News!
The main morning shows, late night TV and celebrity sites and magazines continue to follow Susan Boyle with amazement and much-deserved admiration! This morning’s topic of interest seems to be her apparent “make-over.” The “make-over” includes a hair color that no longer has any gray in it and plucked, shaped eyebrows! Has she been insulted into doing this? I doubt it! I can tell you that these services cost money and in the past, she probably felt that it would be a frivolous expense that she didn’t need anyway. Now that she has offers of all kinds pouring in, and these services were probably strongly recommended, she can easily afford to have someone do these things for her!
Many people are saying that she is a definite shoo-in for “Britain’s Got Talent” with her only real competition being a 12 year-old boy with a spectacular singing voice also. But then the reporters are announcing that even this 12-y.o. prodigy wants Susan to win and is rooting for her! Isn’t life wonderful sometimes? And to think that all of this is music-centered! Fabulous!
Priceless benefits of lullabies
April 22nd, 2009 · Music Healing
More on lullabies
Music with Alzheimer’s Patients is amazingly powerful
April 18th, 2009 · Music with Alzheimer's patients
Recently, I have been working with a gentleman in this 80’s who is in the advanced stages of Alzheimer’s disease. He is a retired minister and was and is much beloved in our community. Each week I go to his home and he sits on the couch, facing the piano, with his wife on one side and an adult daughter on the other. With a lightweight drum in his lap and a stack of hymnals and songbooks on the piano, we begin singing his favorite, familiar songs.
Sometimes when I arrive he’s sleepy or just confused and a little grumpy. Nevertheless, by the time I leave he is invariably sitting upright on the coach, smiling, beating the drum in perfect rhythm and singing most of the words to most of the songs! What do we sing? Well, these were some of yesterdays highlights: “Stouthearted Men, Marine’s Hymn, I’ve Been Working on the Railroad, She’ll be comin’ Around the Mountain, Stand up, stand up for Jesus, Onward Christian Soldiers, and many more. One of the things I look for is familiar songs that have an upbeat tempo and and a steady, pulsating rhythm.
If you know someone with Alzheimer’s, please consider using music as a therapeutic intervention with them! And remember that I do have a CD with music for memory care and Alzheimer’s patients in particular. Click on the link to my website to purchase the CD or a download of it!
Susan Boyle has her moment of fame and glory!
April 16th, 2009 · Music Healing
Who IS Susan Boyle? She is a kindly, 47 y.o. single woman from Blackburn, Scotland who has spent most of her adult life caring for her elderly mother. She claims she was made fun of as a child and was a “slow learner.” Several years ago she started singing karaoke in a local pub in her hometown and for awhile now, people have been suggesting she try out for “Britain’s Got Talent.”
Unless you’ve been in a long deep sleep, you probably know that she burst on the scene last week-end in Britain and absolutely knocked the socks off all the judges and the audience. On the YouTube video the expressions on the faces of audience and judges are absolutely priceless. Most of my friends have seen this at least a dozen times because it is so beautiful and moving. This plain, simple Scottish woman opens her mouth and a gorgeous, golden voice pours out, her beautiful, unassuming personality shines through and we are all captivated and enchanted! If you have seen it, here it is: http://youtu.be/RxPZh4AnWyk. If you have seen, watch it again! If you ever rooted for an underdog you will absolutely shed tears of joy for this delightful Scottish woman says “it still hasn’t really sunk in.”
I just noticed that her YouTube video has had over 15 MILLION hits in less than a week! Witness the power of music and the human spirit to raise the whole level of caring and compassionate in the world!
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