Musicians and music making as a model for the study of brain plasticity
February 10th, 2015
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Gottfried Schlaug
It discusses how musicians and music practice serve as powerful models for studying brain plasticity, showing how extensive musical training reshapes brain structure and function. The chapter highlights neuroanatomical and functional adaptations linked to sensorimotor, auditory, and cognitive skills developed through music.
Progress in Brain Research
DOI: 10.1016/bs.pbr.2014.11.020
Posted byRiley Fitzpatrick
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Abstract/Description
Playing a musical instrument is an intense, multisensory, and motor experience that usually commences at an early age and requires the acquisition and maintenance of a range of sensory and motor skills over the course of a musician's lifetime. Thus, musicians offer an excellent human model for studying behavioral-cognitive as well as brain effects of acquiring, practicing, and maintaining these specialized skills. Research has shown that repeatedly practicing the association of motor actions with specific sound and visual patterns (musical notation), while receiving continuous multisensory feedback will strengthen connections between auditory and motor regions (e.g., arcuate fasciculus) as well as multimodal integration regions. Plasticity in this network may explain some of the sensorimotor and cognitive enhancements that have been associated with music training. Furthermore, the plasticity of this system as a result of long term and intense interventions suggest the potential for music making activities (e.g., forms of singing) as an intervention for neurological and developmental disorders to learn and relearn associations between auditory and motor functions such as vocal motor functions.
