4475 Contributing Writers
Home / Blogs / Musicians use both sides of their brains more frequently than average people
A+ R A-
04 Jan

Musicians use both sides of their brains more frequently than average people

Rate this item
(1 Vote)

via Vanderbilt News:

Supporting what many of us who are not musically talented have often felt, new research reveals that trained musicians really do think differently than the rest of us. Vanderbilt University psychologists have found that professionally trained musicians more effectively use a creative technique called divergent thinking, and also use both the left and the right sides of their frontal cortex more heavily than the average person.

The research by Crystal Gibson, Bradley Folley and Sohee Park is currently in press at the journal Brain and Cognition.

“We were interested in how individuals who are naturally creative look at problems that are best solved by thinking ‘out of the box’,” Folley said. “We studied musicians because creative thinking is part of their daily experience, and we found that there were qualitative differences in the types of answers they gave to problems and in their associated brain activity.”

One possible explanation the researchers offer for the musicians’ elevated use of both brain hemispheres is that many musicians must be able to use both hands independently to play their instruments.

“Musicians may be particularly good at efficiently accessing and integrating competing information from both hemispheres,” Folley said. “Instrumental musicians often integrate different melodic lines with both hands into a single musical piece, and they have to be very good at simultaneously reading the musical symbols, which are like left-hemisphere-based language, and integrating the written music with their own interpretation, which has been linked to the right hemisphere.”

Previous studies of creativity have focused on divergent thinking, which is the ability to come up with new solutions to open-ended, multifaceted problems. Highly creative individuals often display more divergent thinking than their less creative counterparts.

To conduct the study, the researchers recruited 20 classical music students from the Vanderbilt Blair School of Music and 20 non-musicians from a Vanderbilt introductory psychology course. The musicians each had at least eight years of training. The instruments they played included the piano, woodwind, string and percussion instruments. The groups were matched based on age, gender, education, sex, high school grades and SAT scores.

The researchers conducted two experiments to compare the creative thinking processes of the musicians and the control subjects. In the first experiment, the researchers showed the research subjects a variety of household objects and asked them to make up new functions for them, and also gave them a written word association test. The musicians gave more correct responses than non-musicians on the word association test, which the researchers believe may be attributed to enhanced verbal ability among musicians. The musicians also suggested more novel uses for the household objects than their non-musical counterparts.

In the second experiment, the two groups again were asked to identify new uses for everyday objects as well as to perform a basic control task while the activity in their prefrontal lobes was monitored using a brain scanning technique called near-infrared spectroscopy, or NIRS. NIRS measures changes in blood oxygenation in the cortex while an individual is performing a cognitive task.

“When we measured subjects’ prefrontal cortical activity while completing the alternate uses task, we found that trained musicians had greater activity in both sides of their frontal lobes. Because we equated musicians and non-musicians in terms of their performance, this finding was not simply due to the musicians inventing more uses; there seems to be a qualitative difference in how they think about this information,” Folley said.

The researchers also found that, overall, the musicians had higher IQ scores than the non-musicians, supporting recent studies that intensive musical training is associated with an elevated IQ score.

The research was partially supported by a Vanderbilt University Discovery Grant.

Folley is a postdoctoral fellow. Park is a professor of psychology and psychiatry and a member of theCenter for Integrative and Cognitive Neuroscience. Gibson was an undergraduate student and research assistant in the psychology department at Vanderbilt when this work was conducted and is now a Peace Corps volunteer based in Namibia. Park and Folley are Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Research on Human Development investigators.

Last modified on Wednesday, 04 January 2012 15:36

More Blogs

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
Prev Next
Aradia: Multi-talented Dark Core Songstress

Aradia: Multi-talented Dark Core Songstr…

Aradia is a multi instrumentalist and songwriter hailing from Seattle, Washington. Her dar...

Read more
There is a Fire Burning Down Under Dino Jag

There is a Fire Burning Down Under Dino …

Dino Jag has had a long career in pop and enjoys affectionate notoriety in his nati...

Read more
Jacob Hales – Brooklyn’s Off Kilter Troubadour

Jacob Hales – Brooklyn’s Off Kilter Trou…

  Jacob Hales is an avant-garde and experimental multi-instrumentalist (including f...

Read more

Your Indie Music Video Was Deleted By Yo…

So the big record companies were discovered buying fake YouTube views from black hat SEO h...

Read more
A Woodstock Perspective on Losing Levon Helm

A Woodstock Perspective on Losing Levon …

This week, it was an unfortunate time to be an editor of an Arts & Entertainment pap...

Read more
Three Albums and Tours That Prove Shoegaze is Far From Dead

Three Albums and Tours That Prove Shoega…

This year, some of shoegaze and psychedelic music's biggest names are releasing new albu...

Read more
Music You Should Check Out

Music You Should Check Out

Hello, VZ readers. I’ve been listening to a lot of music lately, and I can’t think of much...

Read more
Snider vs. Springsteen: Who's the Better Left-Wing Poet?

Snider vs. Springsteen: Who's the Better…

Every so often, politics become screwed up enough that military action becomes necessary. ...

Read more
A Violinist in the Metro

A Violinist in the Metro

This is an old story published by the Washington Post on April 8, 2007, but still very int...

Read more
Upcoming Project: The 1,001 Greatest Albums of All Time

Upcoming Project: The 1,001 Greatest Alb…

Since I was fifteen, I’ve wanted to write about music. Now I’m eighteen, and I am workin...

Read more
Lou-Lou: A Dreamer's Awakening

Lou-Lou: A Dreamer's Awakening

I have to do this. Jesus, I have to do this. I must do this. Today, in English class, w...

Read more
Musicians use both sides of their brains more frequently than average people

Musicians use both sides of their brains…

via Vanderbilt News: Supporting what many of us who are not musically talented have oft...

Read more
'Tis the Season for Christmas Covers

'Tis the Season for Christmas Covers

‘Tis the season for merriment and covers of great Christmas songs from centuries past. *To...

Read more
Chet Atkins: The Lasting Influence of Mr. Guitar

Chet Atkins: The Lasting Influence of Mr…

Chet Atkins is no longer the household name he was in the 1960s, when he was all over TV...

Read more
Florence and The Machine Will Be Your Next Staple

Florence and The Machine Will Be Your Ne…

Do you like a chicks voice packed with original punch and saturated with folklore style? P...

Read more
Raw Power: A Guided Meditation to Invoking Your Inner Napalm Cheetah

Raw Power: A Guided Meditation to Invoki…

I’m talking about us, but I guess in a big-picture kind of way I’m really talking about th...

Read more
12 Extremely Disappointing Facts About Popular Music

12 Extremely Disappointing Facts About P…

via buzzfeed.com: 1. Creed has sold more records in the US than Jimi Hendrix  ...

Read more
How Musicians Really Make Money in One Long Graph

How Musicians Really Make Money in One L…

article via www.theatlantic.com: In the 1950s, it was not uncommon for a band to make m...

Read more
Why Vinyl Matters

Why Vinyl Matters

It must have been 2:00 AM last night when I started rummaging through my parents’ baseme...

Read more
Laura Marling: I Speak Because I Can

Laura Marling: I Speak Because I Can

Laura Marling is an up and coming folk artist from England. Much like myself, she was born...

Read more
Mistakes and Fantasies Set to Song

Mistakes and Fantasies Set to Song

Music. Don’t you wonder who the first person to ever start singing was? What came over h...

Read more
Spencer Krug’s Moonface: Leave the Revolution to the Revolutionary

Spencer Krug’s Moonface: Leave the Revol…

Spencer Krug of Wolf Parade, and Sunset Rubdown had been leading the revolution of indepen...

Read more
Foster the People Brings Hope for Pop

Foster the People Brings Hope for Pop

  I’m a stickler when it comes to words. That’s why I have a hard time calling the promis...

Read more

Post & Edit Articles

Latest

Follow Us

Calendar Archive

« June 2013 »
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
          1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30

VZ Community

Login