A Little Music With
Exercise Boosts Brain Power, Study Suggests
ScienceDaily (Mar.
24, 2004) COLUMBUS, Ohio
It's no secret that exercise
improves mood, but new research suggests that working out to music may give exercisers a
cognitive boost. Listening to music while exercising helped to increase scores on a verbal
fluency test among cardiac rehabilitation patients. "This is the first study to look
at the combined effects of music and short-term exercise on mental performance," said
Charles Emery, the study's lead author and a professor of psychology at Ohio State
University. "Evidence suggests that exercise improves the cognitive performance of
people with coronary artery disease," Emery said. "And listening to music is
thought to enhance brain power. We wanted to put the two results together." Those
results appear in a recent issue of the journal Heart & Lung.
The study included 33 men and women
in the final weeks of a cardiac rehabilitation program. Most participants had undergone
bypass surgery, angioplasty or cardiac catheterization.
Coronary artery disease may
compromise cognitive ability, Emery said; that's why he and his colleagues chose cardiac
rehabilitation patients for this study.
The researchers asked participants
to complete a verbal fluency test before and after two separate sessions of exercising on
a treadmill. The workouts were scheduled a week apart and lasted about 30 minutes.
Participants listened to classical music Vivaldi's "The Four Seasons"
during one of the sessions. "We used 'The Four Seasons' because of its
moderate tempo and positive effects on medical patients in previous research," Emery
said. "But given the range of music preferences among patients, it's especially
important to evaluate the influence of other types of music on cognitive outcomes."
As a way to measure anxiety and
depression, participants completed a 30-item checklist before and after exercise. The list
included adjectives to describe the patient's current mood. The researchers also tested
each person's verbal fluency before and after each exercise session by asking participants
to generate lists of words in specific categories.
"This kind of task challenges
the part of the brain that handles planning and abstract thought as well as a person's
capacity for organized verbal processing," Emery said.
Participants reported feeling better
emotionally and mentally after working out regardless of whether or not they listened to
music. But the improvement in verbal fluency test performance after listening to music was
more than double that of the non-music condition.
"Exercise seems to cause
positive changes in the nervous system, and these changes may have a direct effect on
cognitive ability," Emery said. "Listening to music may influence cognitive
function through different pathways in the brain. The combination of music and exercise
may stimulate and increase cognitive arousal while helping to organize cognitive
output."
Emery conducted the study with Evana
Hsiao and Scott Hill, both with Ohio State, and David Frid of Pfizer, Inc. A grant from
the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute helped fund this research. Adapted from
materials provided by Ohio State University.