What musical instrument are your therapists and doctor working with you to learn?
http://magazine.good.is/articles/music-literacy-brain
It’s known as the “musician’s advantage.”
For decades, educators, scientists, and researchers have observed
that students who pick up musical instruments tend to excel in
academics—taking the lead in measures of vocabulary, reading, and non-verbal reasoning and attention skills, just to name a few. But why musical training conferred such an advantage remained a bit of a mystery.
Nina Kraus, director of the Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory at Northwestern University and research collaborator on the Harmony Project
has spent her life surrounded by music. And, today, she is studying how
musical training can harness the brain’s natural plasticity, or
adaptiveness, to help students become better overall students and
readers, even when they grow up in impoverished environments.
The “musician’s advantage,” traditionally, has been difficult to
study. Often, musical training is obtained privately in one-on-one
instruction—something available only to kids of higher socio-economic
status. This meant that researchers couldn’t say for certain whether
music was responsible for the better academic outcomes observed or
whether some unrelated factor, linked to living in a home in a higher
income bracket, was behind any observed difference. After all, more
affluent parents are often better educated themselves—and have more time
and resources to help children with their reading and school
work. Perhaps music wasn’t the true differentiator.
But Kraus remained certain that there was something special about
musical instruction. While the brain can change in positive ways in
response to any meaningful activity, she believes music offers unique
benefits.
“Music
and language skills rely upon auditory processing. Although reading may
not be thought of as a primarily auditory activity, its foundation rests
on a child making sense of incoming auditory input in order to map
speech sounds correctly on to orthographic representations,” says
Kraus. “Many of the same aspects of sound processing that are deficient
in children with language and learning impairments have been found to be
strengthened in those who receive music training, and music-based
interventions have demonstrated some success in the remediation of
reading problems, too.”
Kraus wondered if, perhaps, the right intervention might be able to
confer the “musician’s advantage” to children in disadvantaged
neighborhoods. Her past research demonstrated that living at the poverty
level has profound consequences for the brain. Children from
impoverished backgrounds show much poorer neural encoding of sound,
which leads to less efficient and “noisier” auditory processing. And
that, Kraus says, has the power to negatively impact literacy
skills. But what if music could intervene and change that?
To find out, Kraus and her colleagues recruited students at an
inner-city Chicago high school and matched them on reading ability, IQ
and the speed at which their auditory nerves activate. She placed half
the students in a Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Course. The other
half joined a music training program, focusing on sight reading, playing
technique, and musical performance. When she looked at their brain’s
ability to encode speech two years later, she found a profound
difference: the kids who were trained in music were able to show faster
responses to a speech-in-noise stimulus. Their brains, it would seem,
had adapted and improved. And it was music that made the difference.
“We’ve
added a critical new chapter to the story about music and education,”
says Kraus. “Due to the overlap between neural circuits dedicated to
speech and music, and the distributed network of cognitive,
sensorimotor, and reward circuits engaged during music making, it would
appear that music training is a particularly potent driver of
experience-dependent plasticity in the brain that influences processing
of sound related to academics.”
And those effects may reach far beyond high school. Benjamin Rich
Zendel, a neuroscientist at the University of Montreal, found that
musical training is also a boon to the aging brain—allowing elderly
persons with musical training to better differentiate speech
in noise, indicating that even a small amount of music education can
shape neural circuits that will help people better communicate
throughout their lives.
This is why Kraus says that it’s even more important that children,
of all ages and backgrounds, receive musical training as part of a
standard educational curriculum—even as public school budgets are being
slashed. “These programs offer the potential to stimulate positive
biological changes in neural processes important for everyday
communication,” she says. “Educators and legislators can look to our
findings with renewed determination. Because accessible community-based
music training programs can—and do—promote positive change.”
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