First Evidence That
Musical Training Affects Brain Development In Young Children
ScienceDaily (Sep.
20, 2006)
Researchers have found the first
evidence that young children who take music lessons show different brain development and
improved memory over the course of a year compared to children who do not receive musical
training. The findings, published today (20 September 2006) in the online edition of the
journal Brain [1], show that not only do the brains of musically-trained children respond
to music in a different way to those of the untrained children, but also that the training
improves their memory as well. After one year the musically trained children performed
better in a memory test that is correlated with general intelligence skills such as
literacy, verbal memory, visiospatial processing, mathematics and IQ.
The Canadian-based researchers
reached these conclusions after measuring changes in brain responses to sounds in children
aged between four and six. Over the period of a year they took four measurements in two
groups of children -- those taking Suzuki music lessons and those taking no musical
training outside school -- and found developmental changes over periods as short as four
months. While previous studies have shown that older children given music lessons had
greater improvements in IQ scores than children given drama lessons, this is the first
study to identify these effects in brain-based measurements in young children.
Dr Laurel Trainor, Professor of
Psychology, Neuroscience and Behaviour at McMaster University and Director of the McMaster
Institute for Music and the Mind, said: "This is the first study to show that brain
responses in young, musically trained and untrained children change differently over the
course of a year. These changes are likely to be related to the cognitive benefit that is
seen with musical training." Prof Trainor led the study with Dr Takako Fujioka, a
scientist at Baycrest's Rotman Research Institute.
The research team designed their
study to investigate (1) how auditory responses in children matured over the period of a
year, (2) whether responses to meaningful sounds, such as musical tones, matured
differently than responses to noises, and (3) how musical training affected normal brain
development in young children.
At the beginning of the study, six
of the children (five boys, one girl) had just started to attend a Suzuki music school;
the other six children (four boys, two girls) had no music lessons outside school. The
researchers chose children being trained by the Suzuki method for several reasons: it
ensured the children were all trained in the same way, were not selected for training
according to their initial musical talent and had similar support from their families. In
addition, because there was no early training in reading music, the Suzuki method provided
the researchers with a good model of how training in auditory, sensory and motor
activities induces changes in the cortex of the brain. Brain activity was measured by
magnetoencephalography (MEG) while the children listened to two types of sounds: a violin
tone and a white noise burst. MEG is a non-invasive brain scanning technology that
measures the magnetic fields outside the head that are associated with the electrical
fields generated when groups of neurons (nerve cells) fire in synchrony. When a sound is
heard, the brain processes the information from the ears in a series of stages. MEG
provides millisecond-by-millisecond information that tracks these stages of processing;
the stages show up as positive or negative deflections (or peaks), called components, in
the MEG waveform. Earlier peaks tend to reflect sensory processing and later peaks,
perceptual or cognitive processing.
The researchers recorded the
measurements four times during the year, and during the first and fourth session the
children also completed a music test (in which they were asked to discriminate between
same and different harmonies, rhythms and melodies) and a digit span memory test (in which
they had to listen to a series of numbers, remember them and repeat them back to the
experimenter). Analysis of the MEG responses showed that across all children, larger
responses were seen to the violin tones than to the white noise, indicating that more
cortical resources were put to processing meaningful sounds. In addition, the time that it
took for the brain to respond to the sounds (the latency of certain MEG components)
decreased over the year. This means that as children matured, the electrical conduction
between neurons in their brains worked faster.
Of most interest, the Suzuki
children showed a greater change over the year in response to violin tones in an MEG
component (N250m) related to attention and sound discrimination than did the children not
taking music lessons.
Analysis of the music tasks showed
greater improvement over the year in melody, harmony and rhythm processing in the children
studying music compared to those not studying music. General memory capacity also improved
more in the children studying music than in those not studying music.
Prof Trainor said: "That the
children studying music for a year improved in musical listening skills more than children
not studying music is perhaps not very surprising. On the other hand, it is very
interesting that the children taking music lessons improved more over the year on general
memory skills that are correlated with non-musical abilities such as literacy, verbal
memory, visiospatial processing, mathematics and IQ than did the children not taking
lessons. The finding of very rapid maturation of the N250m component to violin sounds in
children taking music lessons fits with their large improvement on the memory test. It
suggests that musical training is having an effect on how the brain gets wired for general
cognitive functioning related to memory and attention."
Dr Fujioka added: "Previous
work has shown assignment to musical training is associated with improvements in IQ in
school-aged children. Our work explores how musical training affects the way in which the
brain develops. It is clear that music is good for children's cognitive development and
that music should be part of the pre-school and primary school curriculum."
The next phase of the study will
look at the benefits of musical training in older adults.
Adapted from materials provided by
Oxford University Press, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.