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Music
Training Fine-Tunes Memory
Excerpt
By
Kathleen
Doheny, HealthDayNews
If Mom marched you to piano lessons or forced you to join the
school orchestra, now may be the time to thank her.
Students who participate in musical
training, such as playing the violin or flute, have better verbal
memory than those who don't, claims a Hong Kong study published
in the July issue of Neuropsychology.
The longer the training, the better
the verbal memory, adds study author Agnes S. Chan, a psychologist
at Chinese University of Hong Kong.
"Not so fast," counters
at least one expert who contends the students who take music lessons
may simply have those cognitive abilities to begin with.
Chan and her colleagues evaluated
90 boys, aged 6 to 15. Half participated in the school string
orchestra program or took music lessons on instruments for one
to five years. The other half had no training in music.
Chan's team gave the youngsters
tests of verbal memory, asking them to recall as many words as
they could from a list, and visual memory, asking them to recall
images.
Those with musical training recalled
about 20 percent more words than those without such training.
Their verbal memory got better the longer they had taken music
training. No differences in visual memory were found.
Musical training during childhood,
Chan writes, "might serve as a kind of sensory stimulation
that somehow contributes to ... better development of the left
temporal lobe in musicians." This, in turn, might facilitate
verbal memory, which is mediated by that specific brain area,
she adds.
But she concedes she has done no
brain imaging to prove that. So the next step is "to conduct
a functional [magnetic resonance imaging] MRI study on individuals
with music training to examine the neurocognitve process of their
brain," Chan says.
The results make sense to another
expert who has studied the same subject.
"I found this study to be
extremely interesting," says Frances Rauscher, an associate
professor of cognitive development at the University of Wisconsin.
"It provides strong evidence not only for a link between
music and verbal memory, but also for the notion that specific
types of experience affect specific cognitive domains. The finding
that verbal memory, but not visual memory, is affected is very
important to this specificity hypothesis. The study complements
the growing number of reports showing differences between the
brains of musicians and non-musicians."
"Overall, the research supports
the idea that early training in music affects brain development
and related cognitive function," Rauscher says.
But Nora Newcombe, a psychology
professor at Temple University in Philadelphia, says there are
two major flaws in the new study.
The students were not randomized
to the music and non-music groups, they were "self-selected,"
she points out. And, she adds, "It shows nothing [in a study]
when you self-select."
The researchers' lack of brain
imaging also bothers Newcombe.
"It could be true," Newcombe
says of the finding that musically trained students have better
verbal memory skills. But so far, the researchers have not proven
it to her satisfaction.
Meanwhile, Chan says she is not
suggesting parents demand their children take music lessons just
in the interest of improving memory.
"Learning music is one way,
but not the only way, to improve verbal memory," she says.
More information
For information on the effects
of music, see Washington
University. To find out how acronyms can boost memory, see
Delaware
State Education Association.
Reference
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