Music and Cognition: The Mozart Effect Revisited

10 Feb
By Jesse Hamlin (San Francisco Classical Voice, http://www.sfcv.org/article/music-and-cognition-the-mozart-effect-revisited)
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In 1993, researchers at UC Irvine published a study in the journal Nature showing that 36 undergrads temporarily improved their spatial-reasoning IQ scores after listening to part of Mozart’s Sonata for Two Pianos in D Major. The story got blown up and oversimplified in the mainstream media, which trumpeted the so-called Mozart effect, the notion that listening to classical music makes you smarter.

The idea was picked up by politicians and popularized by people like Don Campbell, who wrote the best-selling books The Mozart Effect and The Mozart Effect for Children.He actually trademarked “The Mozart Effect” name, and built a small empire peddling CDs and books that variously claim to heal the body and stimulate your baby’s brain. The Irvine researchers, Dr. Francis Rauscher and the late Dr. Gordon Shaw, distanced themselves from all the hype, which they said distorted their findings.

“Generalizing these results to children is one of the first things that went wrong,” Rauscher told NPR in 2010. “Somehow or another the myth started exploding that children that listen to classical music from a young age will do better on the SAT, they’ll score better on intelligence tests in general, and so forth.”

Yet for all the debate about the effect of music listening and training on general cognitive ability, a growing body of research strongly suggests that studying music can enhance a child’s learning skills, including reading. A significant new Canadian study shows that preschoolers who participated in a computerized musical training program improved their verbal intelligence scores after only 20 days.

“Music and language have common biological mechanisms. Musical training strengthens them,” says Dr. Nina Kraus, a noted neurobiologist who runs Northwestern University’s Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory, via e-mail.

“Hear” Training

Kraus’ research has shown that musicians, who memorize sounds and patterns, can process music and language better than people who don’t have musical training. Over time, she says, musical experience fundamentally changes how the nervous system responds to sound. Among other things, musicians are better at hearing speech in noise, an important skill for kids trying to learn in a bustling classroom.

“Music and language have common biological mechanisms. Musical training strengthens them.” – Dr. Nina Kraus

Kraus argues that music should be taught in schools in part because it could engage attention and memory skills, strengthening kids’ “phonological processing” and enhancing their reading skills. As she puts it, reading and music both involve mapping sounds to meaning.

“In addition to contributing to great amusement and well-being, practicing music does, in fact, appear to make you smarter — at least smarter when it comes to how you hear,” Kraus and her Northwestern colleague, Dana Strait, wrote in a recent study, published in Music Perception, titled “Playing Music for a Smarter Ear: Cognitive, Perceptual and Neurobiological Evidence.”

Kraus, whose lab is in the midst of a four-year study on music education and adolescent brain development, was impressed by a study published in October by researchers at York University in Toronto. It showed a rise in verbal IQ scores among young kids who took an interactive music-training program.

Exploring the Link Between Music and Language

The study’s title echoes its conclusion: “Short-Term Music Training Enhances Verbal Intelligence and Executive Function.”

Directed by Dr. Sylvain Moreno, now the lead scientist at the Center for Brain Fitness at the University of Toronto’s Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest, the study focused on 48 kids between the ages of 4 and 6. Half of them participated in an interactive, computerized music-training program; the other half took part in a similar program about visual art. Both software programs were designed by Moreno, using the same cartoon characters, graphics, and tone.

The music kids learned about rhythm, pitch, melody, singing, and basic theory. The art kids learned about line, color, shape, dimension, and perspective. None of the kids had studied music or art before, and none of their parents were professional musicians or artists. The kids participated in the training for two hours a day over a 20-day period.

“The more the music training induced changes in the brain, the more the children improved their intelligence scores.” – Dr. Sylvain Moreno

Before and after completing the programs, each child took the oral Vocabulary and Block Design subtests of the standardized Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of the Intelligence test (the vocabulary to measure verbal ability, the block design to gauge spatial ability). The children were also given a “go/no-go” task — pushing a button when a white shape flashed on a computer screen, or refraining from pushing it when a purple one appeared — while electrodes were attached to their heads to record their brain activity.

There was no appreciable difference in IQ scores between the music kids and art kids before the training. But afterward, more than 90 percent of the music kids improved their verbal scores — some by 14 points — while the art kids showed no significant improvement in verbal ability, and only slight improvement in their spatial skills.

Similarly, the music kids showed greater accuracy on the “go/no-go” task after the training. And their brain waves had notably larger peak amplitudes, showing an increase in brain activity. The task, which engages the fronto-parietal networks of the brain that deal with attention, measures what the brain people call executive function.

Skills That Transfer

“Through this musical training, we were able to stimulate a special brain area, and through this stimulation, we were able to raise the verbal intelligence of these kids,” says the French-born Moreno, on the horn from his Toronto lab. “It’s astonishing that we can do that after 20 days!”

He calls the study, published in Psychological Science, a scientific breakthrough. It’s the first to show a causal relationship between musical training and improved intelligence scores and attention, he says, and it demonstrates that the transfer of one cognitive skill to another can occur in early childhood.

“We had brain plasticity in children after 20 days,” he says. “The brain behavior changed after the musical training. And what we found that was crucial was that the change in intelligence was correlated with the change in the brain: The more the music training induced changes in the brain, the more the children improved their intelligence scores.”

Moreno thinks these findings have important implications for people involved in education and the study of brain plasticity.

The results tell him that “music training is incredibly powerful, and there is a special link between music and these core skills of the brain. … This curriculum, through the power of music, is like a switch button for the cognitive development of children. You turn the switch on to learn.”

Nina Kraus, whose research Moreno and his colleagues cite in their report, gives high marks to the Canadians’ work. “It’s a very important study,” she says. “The effects in verbal IQ scores is a significant discovery.”

The causal effect of Lady Gaga on teen literacy awaits further study.

Jesse Hamlin has written for The San Francisco Chronicle and other publications over the past 30 years on a wide range of music and art, covering jazz musicians and symphonic conductors, sculptors, poets, and architects. He has also written for The New York Times, Art & Auction and Columbia magazines, as well as liner notes for CDs by Stan Getz and Cal Tjader.

Angel Toy Drive

21 Dec

Many, many thanks to all the students, parents and teachers who have generously donated toys!  We are headed off to the Burnaby Christmas Bureau with a car full of toys! The amazing volunteers at the bureau sort all the toys and then assist parents in selecting toys for their children. The Burnaby Christmas Bureau helps countless children and families in need in our community during the holiday season. A big thank you to them for putting in the countless hours to run this program each year!

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Winter Concerts at Staccato

12 Dec

From piano solos to rock bands, Beethoven to Metallica, we heard it all this past Sunday! Since the fall, students have been working hard learning new skills and new songs. Yesterday was their time to shine and share these musical treats with a very appreciative audience. Parents, grandparents, siblings, friends, teachers and more were on hand to offer their support and of course to enjoy the live music! Thank you to all the performers, teachers, parents and volunteers for lending you’d helping hand to make this another successful concert.

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The Great Staccato Skate Update

4 Dec

Thanks to all those who came out to support The Great Staccato Skate fundraiser. A good time was had by all and thanks to all your ticket purchases a grand total of 650.00 was raised! Student Nicholas Hung’s name was drawn and his lucky school Lord Selkirk Elementary will receive the 650.00 for use within their music department. Congrats! We also had many supporters out from Sperling Elementary and because they purchased the most tickets, Staccato Studios will make a donation of 200.00 to their music department. Thank you again for your support at this event! See you on the ice next year!

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The Great Staccato Skate

30 Nov

Supporting Music Programs in Local Schools

Invite your family and friends to this festive event!  Enjoy the holiday tunes as you glide  around a beautifully decorated rink.  Tickets are on sale at the main office at Staccato Studios and at the door.

Date:  Saturday, December 3rd, 5:00 – 6:15 pm

Location:  Burnaby 8 Rinks (6501 Sprott Street)

Cost:  $4.00 per person (Rentals are additional.)

Helmet required for 12 yrs. & younger .

Additional raffle tickets – 1 for $2.00 or 3 for $5.00

Each admission counts as your first raffle ticket in the draw.  If your name is drawn, your child’s school’s music department will win the proceeds of The Great Staccato Skate Raffle.

Last year’s winning school received a $700.00 donation!

 

Feeling the Winter Spirit…

17 Nov

We were feeling the holiday  spirit (and the cool air) and decided to get the decorations up. Here’s what it looks like so far!
We have many festive events coming up in December  including The Great Staccato Skate Fundraiser (all proceeds go to a local school’s music program) and Student Concerts.  Also, keep an eye out for the Angel Project.  We will be collecting unwrapped toys for local children that will be distributed by Burnaby Community Connections.  Happy Thursday!

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Music Together Family Picnic Sept 2011

6 Nov

Each year we host a Music Together family picnic in Confederation Park.  Music Together is a family music and movement program for parents/caregivers and their young children held at Staccato Studios.  It’s always a good time when we meet up with our music friends at the park!



We sing, dance, and jam out under the big trees.  We chat and catch up with all our classmates!

This year we even had homemade cupcakes made by one of our teachers, Catrina.  What a yummy treat!

To top it all off we also had a face painter and balloon art.  What a blast!

Summer Concert August 2011

6 Nov

We had a number of new vocal students this past summer!  With so many students excited about singing, we decided to have a mini-concert in August.  While most performances were vocal, we did sneak in a few piano performances as well.  The audience enjoyed a mix of musical theater, classical, and pop music.  The performance was a success …. for these first-time performers it was a positive experience and I’m sure we’ll hear more from them in the future!

 

Blast From the Picnic Past

1 Aug

I was just going through photos on my computer and came across some cute pics from previous Music Together picnics.  Each summer we hold a big family picnic at the nearby park.  Guests bring their picnic supper, chow down, and then boogie their way through a musical jam session.  I find it so relaxing to make music  under the big tree branches and the big blue sky above!  It’s too bad we couldn’t hold all our classes outside.  On second thought, that may not be a good idea … just thinking of our rainy winter.

We’ve also been lucky to have talented guests  sharing their face painting and balloon making skills.  Check out their amazing creations.

My mind is filled with all these great memories thanks to these photos that I’ve stumbled upon.  I feel so lucky to meet so many fantastic families through the work I do.  Thanks and see you at the next picnic!  (Thank you to Ray Yip for the photos.)

Dancing on the Keys Recital June 2011

26 Jul

I’m still playing catch up with the event follow-ups, but here it is!  Many of the youngest piano students start out in our group class called Dancing on the Keys.  The age range of the students is typically 4 – 7 years old and many are “graduates” of the Music Together program.  We hold a few in-class performances through the year and then a larger concert at the end of the year.  For many of the children it’s their first time performing in front of an audience!  We’re so thrilled by how excited they are to play for 0thers and then of course so impressed to hear what they’ve learned over the year.  Here are a few photos from the event:

So many amazing families out supporting the students

An attentive audience

A fine bow ... good afternoon Mr. Shoes : )

Music trivia = prizes!



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