Carey Daniel, Rosen Stuart, Krishnan Saloni, Pearce Marcus T, Shepherd Alex, Aydelott Jennifer, Dick Frederic
Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, Birkbeck College, University of London, UK; Department of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck College, University of London, UK.
Department of Speech, Hearing and Phonetic Sciences, UCL, London, UK.
Cognition. 2015 Apr;137:81-105. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2014.12.005. Epub 2015 Jan 23.
Performing musicians invest thousands of hours becoming experts in a range of perceptual, attentional, and cognitive skills. The duration and intensity of musicians' training - far greater than that of most educational or rehabilitation programs - provides a useful model to test the extent to which skills acquired in one particular context (music) generalize to different domains. Here, we asked whether the instrument-specific and more instrument-general skills acquired during professional violinists' and pianists' training would generalize to superior performance on a wide range of analogous (largely non-musical) skills, when compared to closely matched non-musicians. Violinists and pianists outperformed non-musicians on fine-grained auditory psychophysical measures, but surprisingly did not differ from each other, despite the different demands of their instruments. Musician groups did differ on a tuning system perception task: violinists showed clearest biases towards the tuning system specific to their instrument, suggesting that long-term experience leads to selective perceptual benefits given a training-relevant context. However, we found only weak evidence of group differences in non-musical skills, with musicians differing marginally in one measure of sustained auditory attention, but not significantly on auditory scene analysis or multi-modal sequencing measures. Further, regression analyses showed that this sustained auditory attention metric predicted more variance in one auditory psychophysical measure than did musical expertise. Our findings suggest that specific musical expertise may yield distinct perceptual outcomes within contexts close to the area of training. Generalization of expertise to relevant cognitive domains may be less clear, particularly where the task context is non-musical.
职业音乐家投入数千小时,以成为一系列感知、注意力和认知技能方面的专家。音乐家训练的时长和强度——远超大多数教育或康复项目——为测试在一种特定情境(音乐)中获得的技能在多大程度上能推广到不同领域提供了一个有用的模型。在此,我们探讨了职业小提琴家和钢琴家在训练过程中获得的特定乐器技能以及更具通用性的乐器技能,与匹配度相当的非音乐家相比,是否能推广到在广泛的类似(主要是非音乐)技能上的卓越表现。在精细的听觉心理物理学测量中,小提琴家和钢琴家的表现优于非音乐家,但令人惊讶的是,尽管他们的乐器有不同要求,二者之间却没有差异。音乐家群体在一个调律系统感知任务上确实存在差异:小提琴家对其乐器特有的调律系统表现出最明显的偏向,这表明长期经验在与训练相关的情境中会带来选择性的感知优势。然而,我们仅发现非音乐技能方面群体差异的微弱证据,音乐家在一项持续听觉注意力测量中有轻微差异,但在听觉场景分析或多模态序列测量上没有显著差异。此外,回归分析表明,与音乐专业知识相比,这种持续听觉注意力指标在一项听觉心理物理学测量中能预测更多的方差。我们的研究结果表明,特定的音乐专业知识可能在接近训练领域的情境中产生独特的感知结果。专业知识向相关认知领域的推广可能不太明显,尤其是在任务情境是非音乐的情况下。