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Musical
experience offsets some aging
effects...Older musicians excel in memory
and hearing speech in noise compared to
non-musicians
May 12, 2011 --- A growing body of research
finds musical training gives students
learning advantages in the classroom. Now a
Northwestern University study finds musical
training can benefit Grandma, too, by
offsetting some of the deleterious effects
of aging.
"Lifelong musical training appears to confer
advantages in at least two important
functions known to decline with age --
memory and the ability to hear speech in
noise," says Nina Kraus, director of the
Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory and
co-author of the study in the May 11 issue
of the online science journal PLoS
One.
Co-written by Northwestern researchers
Alexandra Parbery-Clark, Dana Strait, Samira
Anderson, Emily Hittner and Kraus, "Musical
Experience and the Aging Auditory System"
finds that -- when compared to their
non-musician counterparts -- musicians 45-
to 65-years-old excel in auditory memory and
the ability to hear speech in noisy
environments.
"Difficulty hearing speech in noise is among
the most common complaints of older adults,
but age-related hearing loss only partially
accounts for this impediment that can lead
to social isolation and depression," says
Kraus. "It's well known that adults with
virtually the same hearing profile can
differ dramatically in their ability to hear
speech in noise."
To find out why, the researchers in Kraus'
Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory in
Northwestern's School of Communication
tested 18 musicians and 19 non-musicians
aged 45 to 65 for speech in noise, auditory
working memory, visual working memory and
auditory temporal processing.
The musicians – who began playing an
instrument at age 9 or earlier and
consistently played an instrument throughout
their lives – bested the non-musician group
in all but visual working memory, where both
groups showed nearly identical ability.
The experience of extracting meaningful
sounds from a complex soundscape -- and of
remembering sound sequences – enhances the
development of auditory skills, says Kraus,
Hugh Knowles Chair in Communication
Sciences.
"The neural enhancements we see in
musically-trained individuals are not just
an amplifying or 'volume knob' effect," says
Kraus, who also is professor of neurobiology
and physiology in the Weinberg College of
Arts and Sciences. "Playing music engages
their ability to extract relevant patterns,
including the sound of their own instrument,
harmonies and rhythms."
Music training "fine-tunes" the nervous
system, according to Kraus, a longtime
advocate of music in the K-12 curriculum.
"Sound is the stock in trade of the musician
in much the same way that a painter of
portraits is keenly attuned to the visual
attributes of the paint that will convey his
or her subject," Kraus says.
"If the materials that you work with are
sound, then it is reasonable to suppose that
all of your faculties involved with taking
it in, holding it in memory and relating
physically to it should be sharpened," Kraus
adds. "Music experience bolsters the
elements that combat age-related
communication problems."
###
Under Kraus' direction, Northwestern
researchers are studying musicians from
childhood to old age and discovering how
memory, attention and everyday sound-based
activities such as listening to speech in
noise are altered in the musician's brain.
For more information, visit http://www.brainvolts.northwestern.edu.
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