Cognitive Change Clinical Trial
Official title:
Formal String Instrument Training in a Class Setting Enhances Cognitive and Sensorimotor Development of Primary School Children
This randomized controlled trial shows for the first time that focused musical instrumental practice as compared to traditional sensitization to music provokes multiple transfer effects in the cognitive and sensorimotor domain. Over the last two years of primary school (10-12-year-old children), sixty-nine children received biweekly musical instruction in a group setting by professional musicians within the regular school curriculum. The intervention group learned to play string instruments, whereas the control group, peers in parallel classes, was sensitized to music via listening, theory, and some practice. Broad benefits manifested in the intervention group as compared to the control group for working memory, attention, processing speed, cognitive flexibility, matrix reasoning, sensorimotor hand function and bimanual coordination Apparently, learning to play a complex instrument in a dynamic group setting impacts development much stronger than classical sensitization to music. Our results therefore highlight the added value of intensive musical instrumental training in a group setting, encouraging general implementation in public primary schools, better preparing children for secondary school and for daily living activities.
This 2-year longitudinal study compared cognitive and sensorimotor development of two groups
of children. Both groups received two music courses of 45 minutes per week in a class setting
(maximum 20 children per class), given by professional musicians.
The intervention groups (n=34) learned to play string instruments "Orchestra in Class", the
control groups (n=35) followed the standard Swiss school curriculum, with "sensitization to
music" lessons, lacking focused instrumental practice.
Children who received protocolled extracurricular music lessons before or during the study,
were excluded from the analyses.
The groups were compared at baseline (T0) after one year (T1) and after two years (T2) using
standardized psychometric tests, evaluating cognitive and sensorimotor functions as well as
tests on musicality.
Music practice, covering a wide and diverse field of skills and abilities, from sensorimotor
to cognitive activities at the highest level, is a real driving force for development. Widely
distributed regions in the brain, which support all these functions, are trained and better
coordinated as a result of this practice. This provokes changes in the morphology and
function of the brain. Consequently, practicing music regularly brings benefits that go far
beyond musicality. The results of various studies indicate that children who practice music
show increased verbal memory, verbal intelligence, reading, visual-spatial processing,
executive functions, attention, logical reasoning, and according to some authors even better
mathematics or even IQ and social skills.
Available evidence of beneficial musical practice effects on cognitive child development
predominantly concerns children of parents with a high socioeconomic and educational
background [10] and typically results from private lessons. Additionally, most of the time,
the child is interested to learn a musical instrument, inducing a motivational bias.
Evaluation of beneficial transfer effects restrains in general to a limited number of
capacities or skills and randomized controlled trials (RCTs) with active control groups are
scarce.
Here, the investigators compared children who intensively practiced different string
instruments in a class setting within a specific Orchestra in Class (OC) program, to peers in
parallel classes that received the same amount of musical instruction, also within an entire
class, but lacking focused training on a complex musical instrument. Entire existing classes
were assigned randomly to the OC and the Control programs (cluster randomization). The study
took place in public primary schools in popular neighborhoods in the Geneva area, avoiding
confounding music effects with effects of socioeconomic background.
The investigators anticipated that cognitive functions strongly involved in musical practice
like working memory, attention, information processing, cognitive flexibility and abstract
reasoning, as well as fine sensorimotor function would provoke enhanced positive transfer
effects in the OC group as compared to the control group.
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