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Musicians Are Probably Smarter Than The Rest Of Us


First Posted: 07/20/2011 8:15 am EDT Updated: 09/19/2011 5:12 am EDT

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Want to keep your mind healthy and sharp throughout your life? Pick up an instrument. A new study found that musicians might have brains that function better than their peers well into old age. Bet you wish you stuck with those piano lessons after all.

Researchers tested the mental abilities of senior citizens and discovered that musicians performed better at a number of tests. In particular, musicians excelled at visual memory tasks. While musicians had similar verbal capabilities to non-musicians, the musicians’ ability to memorize new words was markedly better, too. Perhaps most importantly, the musicians’ IQ scores were higher overall than those who spent their lives listening to music rather than performing it.

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The experience of musicians also played a role in how sharp their minds were. The younger the musicians began to play their instruments, the better their minds performed at the mental tasks. Additionally, the total number of years musicians played instruments throughout their life corresponded with how strong their brains remained years later.

The study also found that musicians who took the time to exercise between symphonies had even higher-functioning brain capabilities. This finding supports another recent study that reported people who walk regularly maintain healthier brains. With that in mind, perhaps joining a marching band now will make you the smartest person at the retirement home in the future.

ORIGINAL RESEARCH:

Musicians’ Brains Stay Sharp as They Age

Summary
While it is known that practicing music repeatedly changes the organization of the brain, it is not clear if these changes can correlate musical abilities with non-musical abilities. The study of 70 older participants, with different musical experience over their lifetimes, provides a connection between musical activity and mental balance in old age. “The results of this preliminary study revealed that participants with at least 10 years of musical experience (high activity musicians) had better performance in nonverbal memory, naming, and executive processes in advanced age relative to non-musicians.”



Introduction

Changing one’s lifestyle may postpone the onset of problems connected with old age, like Alzheimer’s disease. These diseases cause cognitive changes like loss of memory, reasoning, and perception. Adequate rest and physical exercise as well as a lifelong habit of stimulating the mind are favorable for clear thinking in old age. Musical activities, undertaken throughout the lifetime, have an impact on one’s mental health during old age. This has been studied in this current research work. Practicing music for a number of years brings about certain changes in brain organization. Comparing the lucidity in old age of those pursued music related activities and those who didn’t may help to understand the effect of the music-related reorganization of brain on successful aging.


Methods

-- Seventy healthy participants, aged between 60 and 83, were divided into three groups, based on their degree of involvement in musical activities, over their lifetimes.
-- 
The three groups were similar in average age, education, handedness, sex ratio, and physical exercise habits.

-- The first group, namely the non-musicians, never received any formal musical training. The second group, the low activity musicians, had one to nine years of training. The third, the high activity musicians, trained for more than 10 years and played regularly afterward.

-- All were tested for brain strengths such as memory, attention, and language prowess, using standardized tests. Their mastery on the use of language, ability to remember, and ability to express oneself were tested.

Results

-- Verbal intellectual ability and learning, as well as recall of verbal information, were found to be similar across the three groups.

-- The high activity musicians were significantly better at performing tasks based on visual inputs.

-- Although language prowess seemed to be similar across the groups, the high activity musicians’ memory for words was significantly better than that of non-musicians.

-- The age at which musical training started affected visual memory, while the number of years of training affected non-verbal memory.

Shortcomings/Next steps

High activity musicians have a better chance of retaining certain mental abilities in old age; however, preexisting factors that may affect their choices have not been considered in this study. Social influences like motivation should be considered in future studies. Effects of musical training on verbal memory need to be analyzed further, by considering changes in brain organization that set in with age. A study on whether the effects of music are generalized or whether they affect only specific parts of the brain could also be undertaken.



Conclusion

Engaging in musical activity for most of one’s lifetime significantly helps remember names, and enhances nonverbal memory, the ability to work based on what one sees and mental agility during old age. The habit of physical exercise, in addition to musical involvement, further adds to mental lucidity in old age. Starting musical training early and continuing it for several years have a favorable effect on mental abilities during old age. Musical training also seems to enhance verbal prowess and the general IQ of a person, although it is possible that people with higher IQ tend to pursue music more seriously. It is advisable to think about our lifestyles and change them accordingly to have a better chance at a healthy, clear-headed old age.

For More Information:

The Relation between Instrumental Musical Activity and Cognitive Aging

Publication Journal: Neuropsychology, April 2011

By Brenda Hanna-Pladdy; Alicia MacKay

From the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas

*FYI Living Lab Reports Are Summaries of the Original Research.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
James Eliason
Pondering Einstein's definition of insanity
03:47 PM on 09/06/2011
If my grandfather who was a organist/pianist is any example, it must be true. He was still going well at 91. My great aunt an amateur pianist was playing at 107 years old.
08:47 AM on 08/29/2011
The term "musician" should have been defined early on in the article. If it applies only to those classically trained, that should be made clear. Also, when results are listed, low activity musicians are left out of the language prowess summation.
05:59 PM on 07/29/2011
They are also very Different people. Most of them have no feelings for life itself in general. They only care for themselves, and no one else. Most of them, not all, like all the attention, and think they are better than the adverage person. In reality, they may be smarter, but most of them are very lonely depressive individuals. That's my take.
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09:10 AM on 07/30/2011
Not all musicians are self-centered attention-seekers. Some people (like myself) rarely perform for others but play daily - sometimes for hours - in the privacy of their own home. As far as your comment about having no feelings for life in general...rubbish and hooey.

And how could you possibly know whether a musician feels deeply or intensely about anything? What are you basing these observations on? Popular culture's images of "musicians"?
11:05 PM on 08/13/2011
That is so not true!!! I know many musicians and none of them do not enjoy life to the fullest, nor are they stuck up! They just are also geniuses and magnificent at music! Besides, I'm a musician in the making and I'm not any of those things you mentioned!!
10:15 AM on 07/29/2011
I used to be a music journalist and interviewed a number of musicians, and believe me, they aren't all smarter than average.
11:52 PM on 08/03/2011
I think you've mistaken pop stars for musicians. Not unlike mistaking 'music journalist' for 'music critic' who are trained in music as well as journalism.
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PostModernGuy
07:31 PM on 07/25/2011
The longevity issue is also important. Composer Elliott Carter is 102 (he wrote his first opera in his 90s!) and still going strong. John Cage was almost 80 when he died, and always had a sharp mind.
Jazz drummers Roy Haynes, Al Foster, and Billy Hart seem to be immortal. Then again, every gig is like 3 hours of aerobic exercise!
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Erewhon7
Join atheists, our non-prophet organization
01:28 AM on 07/24/2011
Thanks. And I agree :-)
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08:27 PM on 07/23/2011
Someone should read this to that bass player I had to fire.
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Erewhon7
Join atheists, our non-prophet organization
01:29 AM on 07/24/2011
Bass players can hardly be counted as musicians
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01:43 AM on 07/24/2011
His replacement sure can. I even give him the dreaded bass solo from time to time. If he was drowning, I'd unplug his amp before I threw it to him.
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Peter Everts
Combat vet. technical trainer, progressive, atheis
06:25 PM on 07/23/2011
Hell, I've known this since I learned to play the guitar in 1963. And, I've just gotten smarter (reading a lot helps).
09:32 AM on 07/23/2011
Too bad the record industry doesn't sign real musicians, only mouthpieces who can be dressed up with fictitious bios and whatnot to make a bunch of hacks a bunch of money.
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PrairieGayCompanion
To improve is to change
12:13 AM on 07/23/2011
Being smarter doesn't doesn't necessarily equate to smart decisions.
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dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
12:01 AM on 07/23/2011
I agree they are smarter when they chose to use their brains. Many I know like to aviod making decisions.
08:32 PM on 07/22/2011
I play my piano with my cd's and can hit most chords...love doing it. Got a bare passing grade in Math.
01:02 PM on 07/22/2011
Ah - Duh !! And we're the ones that rotted our brains getting high and jamming ! LOL Poetic Justice I ever read it ! LOL Think I'll 420 the rest of morning, put on my Fender Strat - turn up my Marshall Amp and subject the rest of the neighborhood to a little "Red House" and help clean the wax out of their ears .
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sinnerG7
If I believed in God I'd be going to Hell
12:25 PM on 07/22/2011
The article makes some very good points I was lucky enough to have the chance to learn piano,clarinet and saxophone in my youth.I was also extremely lucky to have such a great music teacher(Dave Borkenhagen,Dwyer Middle School Huntington Beach ca.)After not playing for quite some time I bought a Roland Synthesizer And fell in love with playing music all over.I would urge anyone who learned to play,but had stopped at some point to pick it back up again.It feeds your mind and your soul!!!
08:27 PM on 07/22/2011
agreed
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doctorJulia
Retired NASA engineer
11:53 AM on 07/22/2011
I don't think that bashing a guitar against a hard surface qualifies as musicianship. Playing good music on a piano streches your brain more than anything I have ever done and that includes solving differential equations.
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playflute2
flootz
10:22 PM on 07/22/2011
Most likely, the piano playing help with the equations. :)
03:36 PM on 07/23/2011
Digging a garden also doesn't qualify as musicianship. Your prejudices are showing. :)

Do you think Andres Segovia bashed his guitar against hard surfaces? How do you think Little Richard compares with Horowitz in terms of piano style? One a musician, and one not? Or both are -- or aren't?

It's a big world, Julia, and creativity comes in many forms. We're lucky that we get to pick what we like. Keep playing!