Hanna-Pladdy Brenda, Gajewski Byron
Departments of Neurology, and Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta, GA, USA.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2012 Jul 19;6:198. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2012.00198. eCollection 2012.
Studies evaluating the impact of modifiable lifestyle factors on cognition offer potential insights into sources of cognitive aging variability. Recently, we reported an association between extent of musical instrumental practice throughout the life span (greater than 10 years) on preserved cognitive functioning in advanced age. These findings raise the question of whether there are training-induced brain changes in musicians that can transfer to non-musical cognitive abilities to allow for compensation of age-related cognitive declines. However, because of the relationship between engagement in general lifestyle activities and preserved cognition, it remains unclear whether these findings are specifically driven by musical training or the types of individuals likely to engage in greater activities in general. The current study controlled for general activity level in evaluating cognition between musicians and nomusicians. Also, the timing of engagement (age of acquisition, past versus recent) was assessed in predictive models of successful cognitive aging. Seventy age and education matched older musicians (>10 years) and non-musicians (ages 59-80) were evaluated on neuropsychological tests and general lifestyle activities. Musicians scored higher on tests of phonemic fluency, verbal working memory, verbal immediate recall, visuospatial judgment, and motor dexterity, but did not differ in other general leisure activities. Partition analyses were conducted on significant cognitive measures to determine aspects of musical training predictive of enhanced cognition. The first partition analysis revealed education best predicted visuospatial functions in musicians, followed by recent musical engagement which offset low education. In the second partition analysis, early age of musical acquisition (<9 years) predicted enhanced verbal working memory in musicians, while analyses for other measures were not predictive. Recent and past musical activity, but not general lifestyle activities, predicted variability across both verbal and visuospatial domains in aging. These findings are suggestive of different use-dependent adaptation periods depending on cognitive domain. Furthermore, they imply that early age of musical acquisition, sustained and maintained during advanced age, may enhance cognitive functions and buffer age and education influences.
评估可改变的生活方式因素对认知影响的研究为认知衰老变异性的来源提供了潜在见解。最近,我们报告了终生乐器练习程度(超过10年)与老年认知功能保留之间的关联。这些发现提出了一个问题,即音乐家是否存在训练引起的大脑变化,这些变化可以转移到非音乐认知能力上,以补偿与年龄相关的认知衰退。然而,由于参与一般生活方式活动与认知保留之间的关系,目前尚不清楚这些发现是由音乐训练还是一般更可能参与更多活动的个体类型所驱动。本研究在评估音乐家和非音乐家的认知时控制了一般活动水平。此外,在成功认知衰老的预测模型中评估了参与的时间(习得年龄、过去与最近)。对70名年龄和教育程度匹配的老年音乐家(>10年)和非音乐家(59 - 80岁)进行了神经心理学测试和一般生活方式活动评估。音乐家在音素流畅性、言语工作记忆、言语即时回忆、视觉空间判断和运动敏捷性测试中得分更高,但在其他一般休闲活动方面没有差异。对显著的认知测量进行了分组分析,以确定预测认知增强的音乐训练方面。第一次分组分析显示,教育程度最能预测音乐家的视觉空间功能,其次是最近的音乐参与,它抵消了低教育程度的影响。在第二次分组分析中,早年音乐习得(<9岁)预测了音乐家言语工作记忆的增强,而其他测量的分析则没有预测作用。近期和过去的音乐活动,而非一般生活方式活动,预测了衰老过程中言语和视觉空间领域的变异性。这些发现表明,根据认知领域的不同,存在不同的使用依赖适应期。此外,这意味着早年音乐习得,并在老年期持续保持,可能会增强认知功能,并缓冲年龄和教育的影响。