Saarikivi Katri, Putkinen Vesa, Tervaniemi Mari, Huotilainen Minna
Cognitive Brain Research Unit, Cognitive Science, Institute of Behavioural Sciences, University of Helsinki, PO Box 9, FI-00014, Helsinki, Finland.
Department of Music, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland.
Eur J Neurosci. 2016 Jul;44(2):1815-25. doi: 10.1111/ejn.13176. Epub 2016 Feb 17.
Previous research has demonstrated that musicians show superior neural sound discrimination when compared to non-musicians, and that these changes emerge with accumulation of training. Our aim was to investigate whether individual differences in executive functions predict training-related changes in neural sound discrimination. We measured event-related potentials induced by sound changes coupled with tests for executive functions in musically trained and non-trained children aged 9-11 years and 13-15 years. High performance in a set-shifting task, indexing cognitive flexibility, was linked to enhanced maturation of neural sound discrimination in both musically trained and non-trained children. Specifically, well-performing musically trained children already showed large mismatch negativity (MMN) responses at a young age as well as at an older age, indicating accurate sound discrimination. In contrast, the musically trained low-performing children still showed an increase in MMN amplitude with age, suggesting that they were behind their high-performing peers in the development of sound discrimination. In the non-trained group, in turn, only the high-performing children showed evidence of an age-related increase in MMN amplitude, and the low-performing children showed a small MMN with no age-related change. These latter results suggest an advantage in MMN development also for high-performing non-trained individuals. For the P3a amplitude, there was an age-related increase only in the children who performed well in the set-shifting task, irrespective of music training, indicating enhanced attention-related processes in these children. Thus, the current study provides the first evidence that, in children, cognitive flexibility may influence age-related and training-related plasticity of neural sound discrimination.
先前的研究表明,与非音乐家相比,音乐家表现出更卓越的神经声音辨别能力,并且这些变化随着训练的积累而出现。我们的目的是研究执行功能的个体差异是否能预测神经声音辨别中与训练相关的变化。我们测量了9至11岁和13至15岁受过音乐训练和未受过音乐训练的儿童在声音变化诱发的事件相关电位以及执行功能测试。在一项用于衡量认知灵活性的任务转换任务中表现出色,与受过音乐训练和未受过音乐训练的儿童的神经声音辨别能力的增强成熟有关。具体而言,表现出色的受过音乐训练的儿童在年幼和年长时都已经表现出较大的失配负波(MMN)反应,表明声音辨别准确。相比之下,表现不佳的受过音乐训练的儿童MMN振幅仍随年龄增长,这表明他们在声音辨别能力发展方面落后于表现出色的同龄人。在未受过训练的组中,只有表现出色的儿童显示出MMN振幅随年龄增长的证据,而表现不佳的儿童MMN较小且无年龄相关变化。后一组结果表明,表现出色的未受过训练的个体在MMN发展方面也具有优势。对于P3a振幅,只有在任务转换任务中表现良好的儿童(无论是否接受音乐训练)出现了与年龄相关的增加,这表明这些儿童的注意力相关过程得到增强。因此,当前的研究首次提供了证据,表明在儿童中,认知灵活性可能会影响与年龄相关以及与训练相关的神经声音辨别可塑性。