Music Listening, Music Therapy, Phenomenology and Neuroscience

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

Appendix 3.02 Survey of The Neurosciences a


nd Music I


I


Conference 2005


From Perception to Performance


Part IV. Developmental Aspects and Impact of Music on Education 


8 papers

Title, Category

Aim

Mus. Material, Cultural Ref.

Technology & Procedure

Main focus of interest

Conclusion

*20. Schellenberg & Hallam (202

-209)
Music listening
Cat. 19: Mood, emotion


  1. Overy et al. (210


-218)

Examining rhythm and melody

processing by fMRI

Cat. 1: Melody
Cat. 4: Rhythm 22. Schlaug et al.
(219

-230)
Effect of music training on the child’s brain
Cat. 10: Training


  1. Jentschke et al. (231


-242)
Music and language in children
Cat. 2: Harmony Cat. 6: Language

Testing the s

patial abilities of

a large sample of 10

-11 year

olds after listening to pop music, Mozart or a verbal discussion
Designing a fMRI protocol specifically for young children
aged 5 to7
To examine the brain and cognitive effects of instr

umental music training on
5-7 years old and 9-

11 y

ears

old

Children
To examine brain processes in children

related to violation

of harmonic expectancies and linguistic syntax

Recorded music:

a)

Pop

recordings by Blur, Mark
Morrison, PJ &

Duncan b) 10

min.

of Mozart String Quintet
K.593 c) A discussion

of the

experiment

. CR: Western /


W. popular Pairs of melodies on

C major

scale or rhyt

hms with

constant pitch. Five notes, marimba

-like sound

CR: Western
Pairs of short musical phrases (SNI,

probably material similar

to 21 above)
CR: Western
1)

Five

-chord sequences,

ending in tonic or supertonic. In some sequences, one chord is pl

ayed in another

instrumental timbre.
2) Correct and incorrect sentences. In some senten





ces, male/female voice is changed in one wor

d

CR: Western

After listening to a) b) or c) in 3 groups, performing two tests of spatial abilities: Square

comple

tion and p

aper

folding
fMRI during same

-or-different

task. Sparse sampling, button press cued by short noise burst fMRI during same

-or-different

task. Sparse sampling, button press
EEG: Event

-related potentials

(ERP) recorded during tasks: 1) Detect different instrumental timbre 2) Detect change in voice timbre

.

a) 11 y

ears

-old

musicians vs.

non

-musicians. b) 5 y

ears

-old

children

with or without

Specific Language Impairment

(SLI

)

Re

-testing the ”Mozart effect”
experiment. The article includes a review of a number of studies which aim at replicating

this experiment

To h

elp

children feel

comfortable and confident during the scanning session
Functional brain changes after one year and after four years of instrumental training
Early right anterior negativity (ERAN), Early left anterior negativity (ELAN

)

The group that listened to popular music performed better than the

two other

groups

. The arousal and


mood of a pleasant stimulus can enhance cognitive performance
Protocol effective, children comfortable.
Clear auditory activatio

ns.

Useful methodology
Preliminary results suggest cognitiv

e and brain effects

from ins

trumental

music

training. O

nly a longitudinal

study can prove causality a) ERAN is present in both groups, larger amplitude in musically trained 11 y

ears

-old

children.
b) ERAN is present in linguistically nonimpaired 5 years

-old

children, but not in

children with language impairment
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