Bangert Marc, Schlaug Gottfried
Department of Neurology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, 330 Brookline Ave, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Eur J Neurosci. 2006 Sep;24(6):1832-4. doi: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2006.05031.x.
Recent studies have shown brain differences between professional musicians and non-musicians with respect to size, asymmetry or gray matter density of specific cerebral regions. Here we demonstrate: (1) that anatomical differences in the motor cortex can already be detected by coarse visual inspection; and (2) that within musicians, even a discrimination of instruments with different manual dominance is possible on a gross anatomical scale. Multiple raters, blinded for subject identity and hemisphere, investigated within-musician differences in the Omega Sign (OS), an anatomical landmark of the precentral gyrus associated with hand movement representation. The sample of 64 brains comprised matched groups of 16 expert string-players, 16 expert pianists and 32 non-musicians. Ratings were analysed by means of kappa statistics. Intra- and interobserver reliabilities were high. Musicians had a more pronounced OS expression than non-musicians, with keyboard-players showing a left and string-players a right hemisphere advantage. This suggests a differential brain adaptation depending on instrument played.
最近的研究表明,职业音乐家和非音乐家在特定脑区的大小、不对称性或灰质密度方面存在大脑差异。在此我们证明:(1)通过粗略的视觉检查就能检测到运动皮层的解剖差异;(2)在音乐家群体中,即使在大体解剖层面上,也能够区分使用不同手型优势的乐器。多名评分者在不知道受试者身份和半球的情况下,研究了音乐家群体中与手部运动表征相关的中央前回解剖标志——欧米伽征(OS)的差异。64个大脑样本包括16名专业弦乐演奏者、16名专业钢琴演奏者和32名非音乐家的匹配组。评分通过kappa统计进行分析。观察者内和观察者间的可靠性都很高。音乐家的OS表现比非音乐家更明显,键盘演奏者表现出左半球优势,弦乐演奏者表现出右半球优势。这表明大脑的适应性差异取决于所演奏的乐器。