How musical training affects cognitive development: rhythm, reward and other modulating variables
TL;DR: It is concluded that musical training uniquely engenders near and far transfer effects, preparing a foundation for a range of skills, and thus fostering cognitive development.
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Abstract: Musical training has recently gained additional interest in education as increasing neuroscientific research demonstrates its positive effects on brain development. Neuroimaging revealed plastic changes in the brains of adult musicians but it is still unclear to what extent they are the product of intensive music training rather than of other factors, such as preexisting biological markers of musicality. In this review, we synthesize a large body of studies demonstrating that benefits of musical training extend beyond the skills it directly aims to train and last well into adulthood. For example, children who undergo musical training have better verbal memory, second language pronunciation accuracy, reading ability and executive functions. Learning to play an instrument as a child may even predict academic performance and IQ in young adulthood. The degree of observed structural and functional adaptation in the brain correlates with intensity and duration of practice. Importantly, the effects on cognitive development depend on the timing of musical initiation due to sensitive periods during development, as well as on several other modulating variables. Notably, we point to motivation, reward and social context of musical education, which are important yet neglected factors affecting the long-term benefits of musical training. Further, we introduce the notion of rhythmic entrainment and suggest that it may represent a mechanism supporting learning and development of executive functions. It also hones temporal processing and orienting of attention in time that may underlie enhancements observed in reading and verbal memory. We conclude that musical training uniquely engenders near and far transfer effects, preparing a foundation for a range of skills, and thus fostering cognitive development.
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Citations
Cognitive Training Does Not Enhance General Cognition.
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TL;DR: The cognitive-training program of research has showed no appreciable benefits, and other more plausible practices to enhance cognitive performance should be pursued.
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Music and emotions: from enchantment to entrainment
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TL;DR: The similarities and differences in the neural substrates underlying these “complex” music‐evoked emotions relative to other more “basic” emotional experiences are reviewed, suggesting that these emotions emerge through a combination of activation in emotional and motivational brain systems that confer its valence to music.
Music improves social communication and auditory-motor connectivity in children with autism.
Megha Sharda,Megha Sharda,Carola Tuerk,Rakhee Chowdhury,Kevin Jamey,Kevin Jamey,Nicholas E. V. Foster,Nicholas E. V. Foster,Melanie Custo-Blanch,Melanie Custo-Blanch,Melissa Tan,Aparna Nadig,Krista L. Hyde,Krista L. Hyde +13 more
TL;DR: This study provides the first evidence that 8–12 weeks of individual music intervention can indeed improve social communication and functional brain connectivity, lending support to further investigations of neurobiologically motivated models of music interventions in autism.
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the available experimental evidence regarding the impact of music training on children and young adolescents' cognitive and academic skills, and concluded that music training does not reliably enhance children and adolescents's cognitive or academic skills and that previous positive findings were probably due to confounding variables.
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Mobile virtual reality for musical genre learning in primary education
Edoardo Degli Innocenti,Michele Geronazzo,Diego Vescovi,Rolf Nordahl,Stefania Serafin,Luca A. Ludovico,Federico Avanzini +6 more
TL;DR: The results show that the use of mobile VR technologies in synergy with traditional teaching methodologies can improve the music learning experience in primary education, in terms of active listening, attention, and time.
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