I started learning piano when I was 5y.o. I stopped playing during high school. Lately I had a bit more time so I started playing my piano again quite randomly. Two days ago I suddenly discovered I could sing and play at the same time! I’ve tried doing that quite randomly a few times previously and couldn’t do it, so it’s a new breakthrough! (yeah I know many people can do this type of thing, but it's just unusual for me coz I couldn't do it before). Learning music is good stuff! Still having new stuff happening past 30y.o.
If
your parents ever submitted you to regular music lessons as a kid, you probably
got in a fight with them once or twice about it. Maybe you didn't want to go;
maybe you didn't like practicing. But we have some bad news: They were right.
It turns out that all those endless major scale exercises and repetitions of
"Chopsticks " had some
incredible effects on our minds.
Psychological
studies continue to uncover more and more benefits that music lessons provide
to developing minds. One incredibly comprehensive longitudinal study, produced
by the German Socio-Economic Panel in 2013, stated the power of music
lessons as plain as could be: "Music improves cognitive and non-cognitive
skills more than twice as much as sports, theater or dance." The study
found that kids who take music lessons "have better cognitive skills and
school grades and are more conscientious, open and ambitious." And that's
just the beginning.
The
following list is a sampling of the vast amount of neurological benefits that music
lessons can provide. Considering this vast diversity, it's baffling that there
are still kids in this country who are not receiving high-quality music
education in their schools. Every kid should have this same shot at success.
1. It improved your reading and verbal skills.
Several studies
have found strong links between pitch processing and language processing
abilities. Researchers out of Northwestern University found that five skills underlie language
acquisition: "phonological awareness, speech-in-noise perception, rhythm
perception, auditory working memory and the ability to learn sound
patterns." Through reviewing a series of longitudinal studies, they
discovered that each these skills is exercised and strengthened by music
lessons. Children randomly assigned to music training alongside reading
training performed much better than those who received other forms of
non-musical stimulation, such as painting or other visual arts. You've got to
kind of feel bad for those kids randomly assigned into art classes.
2. It improved your mathematical and spatial-temporal reasoning.
Music is deeply mathematical
in nature. Mathematical relationships determine intervals in scales, the
arrangement of keys and the subdivisions of rhythm. It makes sense then that
children who receive high-quality music training also tend to score higher in math. This is because of the improved abstract spatial-temporal skills young
musicians gain. According to a feature written for PBS Education, these skills
are vital for solving the multistep problems thatoccur in "architecture, engineering,
math, art, gaming and especially working with computers." With these
gains, and those in verbal and reading abilities, young musicians can pretty
much help themselves succeed in any field they decide to pursue.
3. It helped your grades.
In a 2007 study, Christopher
Johnson, a professor of music education and music therapy at the University of
Kansas, found that "elementary schools with
superior music education programs scored around 22% higher in English and 20%
higher in math scores on standardized tests compared to schools with
low-quality music programs." A 2013 study out of Canada found
the same. Every year that scores were measured, the mean grades of the students
who chose music were higher than those who chose other extracurriculars. While
neither of these studies can necessarily prove causality, both do point out a
strong correlative connection .
4. It raised your IQ.
Surprisingly,
though music is primarily an emotional art form, music training actually
provides bigger gains in academic IQ than emotional IQ.
Numerous studies have found that musicians generally boast higher IQs than
non-musicians. And while these lessons don't necessarily guarantee you'll be
smarter than the schlub who didn't learn music, they definitely made you
smarter than you would have been without them.
5. It helped you learn languages more quickly.
Children who start studying
music early in life develop stronger linguistic abilities. They develop more complex vocabularies , a more
nuanced understanding of grammar and higher verbal IQs . These benefits
don't just impact children's learning of their first language, but also their
ability to learn every language they attempt to learn in the future. The Guardian reports: "Music training plays a
key role in the development of a foreign language in its grammar,
colloquialisms and vocabulary." These heightened language acquisition
abilities will follow students their whole lives and will aid them when they
need to pick up new tongues late in adulthood.
6. It made you a better listener, which will help a lot when
you're older.
Musical training makes people
far more sensitive listeners, which can help tremendously as people age.
Musicians who keep up with their instrument enjoy a much slower decline in
"peripheral hearing ."
They can avoid what scientists refer to as the "cocktail party problem "
in which older people have trouble isolating specific voices (or musical tones)
from a noisy background.
7. It will slow the effects of aging.
But beyond just auditory
processing, musical training can also help delay cognitive decline associated with aging. Some of the
most promising research positions music as an effective way to stave off
dementia. Studies out of Emory University find that even if musicians stop
playing as they age, the neurological restructuring that occurred when they
were kids helps them perform better on
"object-naming, visuospatial memory and rapid mental processing and
flexibility" tests than others who never played. The study authors add, though,
that musicians had to play for at least 10 years to enjoy these effects.
Hopefully you stuck with it long enough.
8. It strengthened your motor cortex.
All musical instruments
require high levels of finger dexterity and accuracy. The training works out
the motor cortex to an incredible extent, and the benefits can apply to a wide
range of non-musical skills. Research published in the Journal of Neuroscience
in 2013 found that kids who start learning to play
before the age of 7 perform far better on non-musical movement tasks. Exposure
at a young age builds connectivity in the corpus callosum, which provides a strong foundation upon
which later movement training can build.
9. It improved your working memory.
Playing music puts a high
level of demand on one's working memory (or short-term memory). And it seems
the more one practices their instrument, the stronger their working memory
becomes. A 2013 study found that musical practice has a positive
association with participants' working memory capacity, their processing speed
and their reasoning abilities. Writing for Psychology
Today, William R. Klemm claims that musicians' memory
abilities shouldspread into all non-musical verbal realms,
helping them remember more content from speeches, lectures or soundtracks.
10. It improved your long-term memory for visual stimuli.
Music training can also
affect long-term memory, especially in the visual realm. Scientists at the
University of Texas at Arlington reported last year that classically trained
musicians who have been playing more than 15 years score higher on pictorial long-term memory tests.
This heightened visual sensitivity likely comes from parsing complex musical scores. The study
makes no claims for musicians who learn to play without reading music.
11. It made you better at managing anxiety.
Analyzing brain scans of
musicians ages 6 through 18, researchers out of the University of Vermont
College of Medicine have found tremendous thickening of the cortex in areas responsible for
depression, aggression and attention problems. According to the study's
authors, musical training "accelerated cortical organization in attention
skill, anxiety management and emotional control." That's why you're so
emotionally grounded all the time, right? Right.
12. It enhanced your self-confidence and self-esteem.
Several studies have shown
how music can enhance children's self-confidence and self-esteem. A 2004 study
split a sample of 117 fourth graders from a Montreal public school. One group
received weekly piano instruction for three years while the control received no
formal instructions. Those who played weekly scored significantly higher on
self-esteem tests than those who did not. As most of us know, high levels of
self-esteem can help children grow and develop in a vast number of academic and
non-academic realms.
13. It made you more creative.
Creativity
is notoriously difficult to measure scientifically. All measures generally
leave something to be desired. But most sources hold that music training enhances creativity "particularly when the
musical activity itself is creative (for instance, improvisation)."
According to Education Week , Ana Pinho, a
neuroscientist at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, found that musicians
with "longer experience in improvising music had better and more targeted
activity in the regions of the brain associated with creativity." Music
training also enhances communication between the right and left hemispheres of the
brain. And studies show musicians perform far better on divergent thinking tests , coming up with greater
numbers of novel, unexpected ways to combine new information.
No comments:
Post a Comment