Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-1), Forschungszentrum Jülich Jülich, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2013 Sep 23;4:636. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00636. eCollection 2013.
To what extent does musical practice change the structure of the brain? In order to understand how long-lasting musical training changes brain structure, 20 male right-handed, middle-aged professional musicians and 19 matched controls were investigated. Among the musicians, 13 were pianists or organists with intensive practice regimes. The others were either music teachers at schools or string instrumentalists, who had studied the piano at least as a subsidiary subject, and practiced less intensively. The study was based on T1-weighted MR images, which were analyzed using deformation-based morphometry. Cytoarchitectonic probabilistic maps of cortical areas and subcortical nuclei as well as myeloarchitectonic maps of fiber tracts were used as regions of interest to compare volume differences in the brains of musicians and controls. In addition, maps of voxel-wise volume differences were computed and analyzed. Musicians showed a significantly better symmetric motor performance as well as a greater capability of controlling hand independence than controls. Structural MRI-data revealed significant volumetric differences between the brains of keyboard players, who practiced intensively and controls in right sensorimotor areas and the corticospinal tract as well as in the entorhinal cortex and the left superior parietal lobule. Moreover, they showed also larger volumes in a comparable set of regions than the less intensively practicing musicians. The structural changes in the sensory and motor systems correspond well to the behavioral results, and can be interpreted in terms of plasticity as a result of intensive motor training. Areas of the superior parietal lobule and the entorhinal cortex might be enlarged in musicians due to their special skills in sight-playing and memorizing of scores. In conclusion, intensive and specific musical training seems to have an impact on brain structure, not only during the sensitive period of childhood but throughout life.
音乐练习在多大程度上改变了大脑的结构?为了了解长期的音乐训练如何改变大脑结构,研究人员调查了 20 名右利手的中年男性职业音乐家和 19 名匹配的对照组。在这些音乐家当中,13 人是钢琴家或管风琴演奏家,他们有密集的练习安排。其他人要么是学校的音乐教师,要么是弦乐器演奏者,他们至少作为辅修科目学习过钢琴,并且练习的强度较低。该研究基于 T1 加权磁共振成像(MRI),使用基于变形的形态测量学进行分析。皮质区域和皮质下核的细胞构筑概率图以及纤维束的髓鞘构筑图被用作感兴趣区域,以比较音乐家和对照组大脑的体积差异。此外,还计算和分析了体素水平体积差异的图谱。与对照组相比,音乐家表现出明显更好的对称运动表现以及更好的手部独立性控制能力。结构 MRI 数据显示,键盘演奏者的大脑在右侧感觉运动区域和皮质脊髓束以及内嗅皮层和左顶叶上回与对照组之间存在显著的体积差异。此外,他们在一组可比的区域中也显示出比练习强度较低的音乐家更大的体积。感觉和运动系统的结构变化与行为结果非常吻合,可以根据强化运动训练的可塑性来解释。顶叶上回和内嗅皮层的区域可能因音乐家在视奏和乐谱记忆方面的特殊技能而扩大。总之,密集和特定的音乐训练似乎对大脑结构有影响,不仅在儿童的敏感时期,而且在整个生命周期中都有影响。