Your Aging Brain Will Be in Better Shape If You've Taken Music Lessons 
https://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/01/140103-music-lessons-brain-aging-cognitive-neuroscience/
 



 Studies are showing that learning to play an instrument can bring significant 
improvements in your brain.



 
 By ,  for National Geographic http://news.nationalgeographic.com/
 
 PUBLISHED  JANUARY 3, 2014




 


  VIEW IMAGES
 
 Musical training in childhood creates additional neural connections that can 
last a lifetime. 
 PHOTOGRAPH BY JANINE WIEDEL PHOTOLIBRARY/ALAMY

 

 Part of our weekly "In Focus" series—stepping back, looking closer.

 
 Are music lessons the way to get smarter?

 That's what a lot of parents (and experts) believe: Studying an instrument 
gives children an advantage in the development of their intellectual, 
perceptual, and cognitive skills. This may, however, turn out to be wishful 
thinking. Two new randomized trials 
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0082007 have 
found no evidence for the belief. The IQs of preschoolers who attended several 
weeks of music classes as part of these studies did not differ significantly 
from the IQs of those who had not.

 But that does not mean that the advantages of learning to play music are 
limited to expressing yourself, impressing friends, or just having fun. A 
growing number of studies show that music lessons in childhood can do something 
perhaps more valuable for the brain than childhood gains: provide benefits for 
the long run, as we age, in the form of an added defense against memory loss, 
cognitive decline, and diminished ability to distinguish consonants and spoken 
words.

 Not only that, you may well get those benefits even if you haven't tickled the 
ivories, strummed the guitar, or unpacked your instrument from its case in 
years. And dividends could even be in store if you decide to pick up an 
instrument for the very first time in mid­life or beyond.

 
 The reason is that musical training can have a "profound" and lasting impact 
on the brain, creating additional neural connections in childhood that can last 
a lifetime and thus help compensate for cognitive declines later in life, says 
neuropsychologist Brenda Hanna­-Pladdy 
http://neurology.emory.edu/faculty/neuropsychology/hanna-pladdy_brenda.html of 
Emory University in Atlanta. Those many hours spent learning and practicing 
specific types of motor control and coordination (each finger on each hand 
doing something different, and for wind and brass instruments, also using your 
mouth and breathing), along with the music­-reading and listening skills that 
go into playing an instrument in youth, are all factors contributing to the 
brain boost that shows up later in life.

 Musical Training Grows Your Brain

 You can even map the impact of musical training on the brain: In a 2003 study 
http://www.jneurosci.org/content/23/27/9240.full, Harvard neurologist Gottfried 
Schlaug http://connects.catalyst.harvard.edu/Profiles/display/Person/30427 
found that the brains of adult professional musicians had a larger volume of 
gray matter than the brains of non­musicians had. Schlaug and colleagues also 
found that after 15 months of musical training in early childhood, structural 
brain changes 
http://www.musicianbrain.com/papers/Hyde_MusicTraining_BrainPlasticity_nyas_04852.pdfassociated
 with motor and auditory improvements begin to appear. 
http://www.musicianbrain.com/papers/Hyde_MusicTraining_BrainPlasticity_nyas_04852.pdf

 Still other studies have shown an increase in the volume of white matter. Such 
findings speak to the brain's plasticity—its ability to change or adapt in 
response to experience, environment, or behavior. It also shows the power of 
musical training to enhance and build connections within the brain.

 "What's unique about playing an instrument is that it requires a wide array of 
brain regions and cognitive functions to work together simultaneously, in both 
right and left hemispheres of the brain," says Alison Balbag 
http://gero.usc.edu/students/ph-d-students/alison-balbag/, a professional 
harpist who began musical training at the age of five, holds a doctorate in 
music, and is currently earning her Ph.D. in gerontology (with a special focus 
on the impact of music on health throughout the life span) at the University of 
Southern California. Playing music may be an efficient way to stimulate the 
brain, she says, cutting across a broad swath of its regions and cognitive 
functions and with ripple effects through the decades.

 


 The Longer You Played an Instrument, the Better

 More research is showing this might well be the case. In Hanna­-Pladdy's first 
study on the subject http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21463047, published in 
2011, she divided 70 healthy adults between the ages of 60 and 83 into three 
groups: musicians who had studied an instrument for at least ten years, those 
who had played between one and nine years, and a control group who had never 
learned an instrument or how to read music. Then she had each of the subjects 
take a comprehensive battery of neuropsychological tests.

 The group who had studied for at least ten years scored the highest in such 
areas as nonverbal and visuo­spatial memory, naming objects, and taking in and 
adapting new information. By contrast, those with no musical training performed 
least well, and those who had played between one and nine years were in the 
middle.

 In other words, the more they had trained and played, the more benefit the 
participants had gained. But, intriguingly, they didn't lose all of the 
benefits even when they hadn't played music in decades.

 Hanna-­Pladdy's second study http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22833722, 
published in 2012, confirmed those findings and further suggested that starting 
musical training before the age of nine (which seems to be a critical 
developmental period) and keeping at it for ten years or more may yield the 
greatest benefits, such as increased verbal working memory, in later adulthood. 
That long-­term benefit does not depend on how much other education you 
received in life.

 


  VIEW IMAGES
 Starting musical training before age nine and continuing for a decade may 
yield the greatest benefits. 
 PHOTOGRAPH BY PAULA SOLLOWAY, ALAMY


 "We found that the adults who benefited the most in older age were those with 
lower educational levels," she says. "[Musical training] could be making up for 
the lack of cognitive stimulation they had academically." She points to the 
important role music education can play, especially at a time when music 
curricula are falling prey to school system budget cuts.

 Playing Music Improves Your Ability to Discern Sounds

 Neuroscientist Nina Kraus 
http://www.communication.northwestern.edu/faculty/?PID=NinaKraus of 
Northwestern University in Chicago found still more positive effects 
http://www.soc.northwestern.edu/brainvolts/documents/krauschandrasekeran_nrn10.pdf
 on older adults of early musical training—this time, in the realm of hearing 
and communication. She measured the electrical activity in the auditory 
brainstems of 44 adults, ages 55 to 76, as they responded to the synthesized 
speech syllable "da." Although none of the subjects had played a musical 
instrument in 40 years, those who had trained the longest—between four and 
fourteen years—responded the fastest.

 That's significant, says Kraus, because hearing tends to decline as we age, 
including the ability to quickly and accurately discern consonants,­­ a skill 
crucial to understanding and participating in conversation.

 "If your nervous system is not keeping up with the timing necessary for 
encoding consonants—did you say bill or pill or fill, or hat or that—even if 
the vowel part is understood," you will lose out on the flow and meaning of the 
conversation, says Kraus, and that can potentially lead to a downward spiral of 
feeling socially isolated.

 The reason, she speculates, may be that musical training focuses on a very 
precise connection between sound and meaning. Students focus on the note on a 
page and the sound that it represents, on the ways sounds do (and don't) go 
together, on passages that are to be played with a specific emotion. In 
addition, they're using their motor system to create those sounds through their 
fingers.

 "All of these relationships have to occur very precisely as you learn to play, 
and perhaps you carry that with you throughout your life," she says. The payoff 
is the ability to discern specific sounds—like syllables and words in 
conversation—with greater clarity.

 There may be other potentially significant listening­ and hearing benefits in 
later life as well, she suspects, though she has not yet tested them. 
"Musicians throughout their lives, and as they age, hear better in noisy 
environments," she says. "Difficulty in hearing words against a noisy 
background is a common complaint among people as they get older."

 In addition, the fact that musical training appears
 to enhance auditory 
working memory—needed to improvise, memorize, play in time, and tune your 
instrument—might help reinforce in later life the memory capacity that 
facilitates communication and conversation.

 You Can Start Now

 It's not too late to gain benefits even if you didn't take up an instrument 
until later in life. Jennifer Bugos 
http://music.arts.usf.edu/content/templates/?a=2928&z=41, an assistant 
professor of music education at the University of South Florida, Tampa, studied 
the impact of individual piano instruction on adults between the ages of 60 and 
85. After six months, those who had received piano lessons showed more robust 
gains in memory, verbal fluency, the speed at which they processed information, 
planning ability, and other cognitive functions, compared with those who had 
not received lessons.

 More research on the subject is forthcoming from Bugos and from other 
researchers in what appears to be a burgeoning field. Hervé Platel 
http://community.frontiersin.org/people/u/86611, a professor of neuropsychology 
at the Université de Caen Basse-­Normandie, France, is embarking on a 
neuroimaging study of healthy, aging non­musicians just beginning to study a 
musical instrument.

 And neuroscientist Julene Johnson 
http://nursing.ucsf.edu/faculty/julene-johnson, a professor at the Institute 
for Health and Aging at the University of California, San Francisco, is now 
investigating the possible cognitive, motor, and physical benefits garnered by 
older adults who begin singing in a choir after the age of 60. She'll also be 
looking the psycho­social and quality-of-life aspects.

 "People often shy away from learning to play a musical instrument at a later 
age, but it's definitely possible to learn and play well into late adulthood," 
Bugos says.

 Moreover, as a cognitive intervention to help aging adults preserve, and even 
build, skills, musical training holds real promise. "Musical training seems to 
have a beneficial impact at whatever age you start. It contains all the 
components of a cognitive training program that sometimes are overlooked, and 
just as we work out our bodies, we should work out our minds."

 
 Sure, your friends might laugh when you sit down at the piano, but your brain 
may well have the last laugh.

 

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