Department of Neurology, Music and Neuroimaging Laboratory, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA.
Neuroscientist. 2010 Oct;16(5):566-77. doi: 10.1177/1073858410377805.
Playing a musical instrument is an intense, multisensory, and motor experience that usually commences at an early age and requires the acquisition and maintenance of a range of skills over the course of a musician's lifetime. Thus, musicians offer an excellent human model for studying the brain effects of acquiring specialized sensorimotor skills. For example, musicians learn and repeatedly practice the association of motor actions with specific sound and visual patterns (musical notation) while receiving continuous multisensory feedback. This association learning can strengthen connections between auditory and motor regions (e.g., arcuate fasciculus) while activating multimodal integration regions (e.g., around the intraparietal sulcus). We argue that training of this neural network may produce cross-modal effects on other behavioral or cognitive operations that draw on this network. Plasticity in this network may explain some of the sensorimotor and cognitive enhancements that have been associated with music training. These enhancements suggest the potential for music making as an interactive treatment or intervention for neurological and developmental disorders, as well as those associated with normal aging.
演奏乐器是一种强烈的、多感官的和运动的体验,通常始于早年,并需要在音乐家的一生中获得和维持一系列技能。因此,音乐家为研究获得专门感觉运动技能的大脑效应提供了一个极好的人类模型。例如,音乐家在不断接受多感官反馈的同时,学习并反复练习将运动动作与特定的声音和视觉模式(乐谱)联系起来。这种联想学习可以增强听觉和运动区域(例如弓状束)之间的连接,同时激活多模态整合区域(例如,顶内沟周围)。我们认为,对这个神经网络的训练可能会对其他依赖这个网络的行为或认知操作产生跨模态的影响。该网络的可塑性可以解释与音乐训练相关的一些感觉运动和认知增强。这些增强表明,作曲作为一种互动治疗或干预手段,可能对神经和发育障碍以及与正常衰老相关的障碍具有潜在的应用价值。