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Music & Intelligence: Will Listening to
Music Make You Smarter?
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by:
Duane Shinn
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Will listening to music make you smarter?
Will learning to play a musical instrument make your brain grow larger
than normal?
Questions like these ones have been popping up all over the place in
the past few years, and not just in scientific journals either.
In recent times the media has been fascinated by the research
surrounding brain development and music, eagerly reporting on the
latest studies to the delight of the music-loving parents of young
children.
But all this information - and some misinformation too - has led to
generalized confusion about the role of music and music training in the
development of the human brain. The bottom line is this: if you're
confused by all you read about music study and brain development,
you're certainly not alone.
In part, this is due to the manner in which the phrase "the Mozart
Effect" has been popularized by the media and bandied about to describe
any situation in which music has a positive effect on cognition or
behavior.
In fact the Mozart Effect refers specifically to a 1993 research
finding by Frances Rauscher, Gordon Shaw and Katherine Ky and published
in the prestigious journal Nature. The scientists found that 36 college
students who listened to 10 minutes of a Mozart sonata performed higher
on a subsequent spatial-temporal task than after they listened to
relaxation instructions or silence.
An enchanted media reported this interesting research as "Mozart makes
you smarter" - a huge over-simplification of the original results.
As Rauscher explains in a later paper, the Mozart Effect was studied
only in adults, lasted only for a few minutes and was found only for
spatial temporal reasoning. Nevertheless, the finding has since
launched an industry that includes books, CDs and websites claiming
that listening to classical music can make children more intelligent.
The scientific controversy - not to mention the popular confusion -
surrounding the Mozart Effect, has given rise to a corresponding
perplexity for parents. They wonder: "Should my kids even bother with
music education?"
In fact the answer to this question is still a resounding yes, since
numerous research studies do prove that studying music contributes
unequivocally to the positive development of the human brain. Other
researchers have since replicated the original 1993 finding that
listening to Mozart improves spatial reasoning. And further research by
Rauscher and her colleagues in 1994 showed that after eight months of
keyboard lessons, preschoolers demonstrated a 46% boost in their
spatial reasoning IQ, a skill important for certain types of
mathematical reasoning.
In particular, it is early music training that appears to most
strengthen the connections between brain neurons and perhaps even leads
to the establishment of new pathways. But research shows music training
has more than a casual relationship to the long-term development of
specific parts of the brain too.
In 1994 Discover magazine published an article which discussed research
by Gottfried Schlaug, Herman Steinmetz and their colleagues at the
University of Dusseldorf. The group compared magnetic resonance images
(MRI) of the brains of 27 classically trained right-handed male piano
or string players, with those of 27 right-handed male non-musicians.
Intriguingly, they found that in the musicians' planum temporale - a
brain structure associated with auditory processing - was bigger in the
left hemisphere and smaller in the right than in the non-musicians. The
musicians also had a thicker nerve-fiber tract between the hemisphere.
The differences were especially striking among musicians who began
training before the age of seven.
According to Shlaug, music study also promotes growth of the corpus
callosum, a sort of bridge between the two hemispheres of the brain. He
found that among musicians who started their training before the age of
seven, the corpus callosum is 10-15% thicker than in non-musicians.
At the time, Schlaug and other researchers speculated that a larger
corpus callosum might improve motor control by speeding up
communication between the hemispheres.
Since then, a study by Dartmouth music psychologist Petr Janata
published by Science in 2002, has confirmed that music prompts greater
connectivity between the brains left and right hemisphere and between
the areas responsible for emotion and memory, than does almost any
other stimulus.
Janata led a team of scientists who reported some areas of the brain
are 5% larger in expert musicians than they are in people with little
or no musical training, and that the auditory cortex in professional
musicians is 130% denser than in non-musicians. In fact, among
musicians who began their musical studies in early childhood, the
corpus callosum, a four-inch bundle of nerve fibers connecting the left
and right sides of the brain, can be up to 15% larger.
While it is now clear from research studies that brain region
connectivity and some types of spatial reasoning functionality is
improved by music training, there is growing evidence that detailed and
skilled motor movements are also enhanced.
Apparently the corpus callosum in musicians is essential for tasks such
as finger coordination. Like a weight-lifter's biceps, this portion of
the brain enlarges to accommodate the increased labour assigned to it.
In a study conducted by Dr. Timo Krings and reported in Neuroscience
Letters in 2000, pianists and non-musicians of the same age and sex
were required to perform complex sequences of finger movements. The
non-musicians were able to make the movements as correctly as the
pianists, but less activity was detected in the pianists' brains. The
scientists concluded that compared to non-musicians, the brains of
pianists are more efficient at making skilled movements.
The study of music definitely affects the human brain and its
development, in a staggering number of ways. But what to make of all
the research, especially in terms of deciding the best course of music
study or appreciation for yourself or your offspring?
A 2000 article by N M Weinberger in MuSICA Research Notes makes the
following excellent point: Although the Mozart Effect may not list up
to the unjustified hopes of the public, it has brought widespread
interest in music research to the public. And listening to ten minutes
of Mozart could get someone interested in listening to more unfamiliar
music, opening up new vistas.
Irregardless of the hype surrounding the Mozart Effect, the overall
academic evidence for music study as a tool to aid brain development,
is compelling.
At the University of California School of Medicine in San Francisco,
Dr. Frank Wilson says his research shows instrumental practice enhances
coordination, concentration and memory and also brings about the
improvement of eyesight and hearing. His studies have shown that
involvement in music connects and develops the motor systems of the
brain, refining the entire neurological system in ways that cannot be
done by any other activity. Dr. Wilson goes so far as to say he
believes music instruction is actually 'necessary' for the total
development of the brain.
So the bottom line is this: Music study and practice probably does aid
in the development of the brain in various important ways. And after
all, if you enjoy music, there is nothing to lose by trying, and
everything to gain!
About the author:
Duane Shinn is the author of over 500 music and piano lesson
instructional courses for adults such as http://www.pianolessonsbyvideo.comHe
is the author of the popular free 101-week e-mail newsletter titled
"Amazing Secrets Of Piano Chords & Sizzling Chord Progressions"
with over 60,100 current subscribers. Those interested may obtain a
free subscription by going to http://www.playpiano.com/
Circulated by Article Emporium
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