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Taking up music so you can hear
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Anyone with an MP3 device -- just about every
man, woman and child on the planet today, it
seems -- has a notion of the majesty of
music, of the primal place it holds in the
human imagination.
But musical training should not be seen simply as stuff of the soul
-- a frill that has to go when school
budgets dry up, according to a new
Northwestern University study.
The study shows that musicians -- trained to hear sounds embedded
in a rich network of melodies and harmonies
-- are primed to understand speech in a
noisy background, say in a restaurant,
classroom or plane.
It is the first demonstration of musical training offsetting the
deleterious effects of background noise, and
the implications are provocative.
"The study points to a highly pragmatic side of music's magic,"
said Nina Kraus, Hugh Knowles Professor of
Communication Sciences and Neurobiology and
director of Northwestern's Auditory
Neuroscience Laboratory, where the research
was done.
The findings strongly support the potential therapeutic and
rehabilitation use of musical training to
address auditory processing and
communication disorders throughout the life
span.
Hearing speech in noise is difficult for everyone. But the
difficulty is particularly acute for older
adults, who are likely to have hearing and
memory loss, and for poor readers who have
normal hearing but whose nervous systems
poorly transcribe sounds that ultimately are
critical to good reading skills.
"Many older adults will say, 'I can hear what you're saying, but I
don't understand you,'" Kraus said. "So they
might have a little bit of a hearing loss,
but often not enough to warrant the
difficulty that a lot of older adults
report."
Such populations could benefit from the reordering of the nervous
system that occurs with musical training,
according to the study. Because the brain
changes with experience, musicians have
better-tuned circuitry -- the pitch, timing
and spectral elements of sound are
represented more strongly and with greater
precision in their nervous systems.
"Musical training makes musicians really good at picking out
melodies, the bass line, the sound of their
own instruments from complex sounds," Kraus
said. Now, for the first time, this study
has confirmed that such fine tuning of the
nervous system also makes musicians highly
adept at translating speech in noise.
The finding has particular implications for hearing certain
consonants which are vulnerable to
misinterpretation by the brain and are a big
problem for some poor readers in a noisy
environment. The brain's unconscious faulty
interpretation of sounds makes a big
difference in how words ultimately will be
read.
Thirty-one study participants, with normal hearing and a mean age
of 23, were divided into one group with
music experience and another without it.
They had to listen to sentences presented in
increasingly noisy conditions and repeat
back what they heard.
Better perception in noise was linked with better working memory
and tone discrimination ability. The results
imply that musical training enhances the
ability to hear speech in challenging
listening environments by strengthening
auditory memory and the representation of
important acoustic features.
In one of the tests, for example, participants had to repeat back
"The square peg will settle in the round
hole." Such longer sentences that are
syntactically correct but lack familiar cues
measure working memory as well as the
ability to distinguish sounds in noise.
The Auditory Neuroscience Lab at Northwestern has helped establish
the relationship between sound encoding in
the brain and linguistic abilities by
showing that the very neural sound
transcription processes that are deficient
in children with dyslexia are enhanced in
people with musical experience. Based on
this collective work, poor readers may show
greater benefits from training programs that
include music as well as speech sounds.
By reinforcing the pervasive effects that musical experience has on
sound-processing abilities, Kraus stressed,
this study underscores the importance of
music education being more accessible to the
general population.
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