Burzynska Agnieszka Z, Finc Karolina, Taylor Brittany K, Knecht Anya M, Kramer Arthur F
Department of Human Development and Family Studies, Molecular, Cellular and Integrative Neurosciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, United States.
Centre for Modern Interdisciplinary Technologies, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Toruń, Poland.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2017 Nov 27;11:566. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2017.00566. eCollection 2017.
Dance - as a ritual, therapy, and leisure activity - has been known for thousands of years. Today, dance is increasingly used as therapy for cognitive and neurological disorders such as dementia and Parkinson's disease. Surprisingly, the effects of dance training on the healthy young brain are not well understood despite the necessity of such information for planning successful clinical interventions. Therefore, this study examined actively performing, expert-level trained college students as a model of long-term exposure to dance training. To study the long-term effects of dance training on the human brain, we compared 20 young expert female Dancers with normal body mass index with 20 age- and education-matched Non-Dancers with respect to brain structure and function. We used diffusion tensor, morphometric, resting state and task-related functional MRI, a broad cognitive assessment, and objective measures of selected dance skill (Dance Central video game and a balance task). Dancers showed superior performance in the Dance Central video game and balance task, but showed no differences in cognitive abilities. We found little evidence for training-related differences in brain volume in Dancers. Dancers had lower anisotropy in the corticospinal tract. They also activated the (AON) to greater extent than Non-Dancers when viewing dance sequences. Dancers showed altered functional connectivity of the AON, and of the general motor learning network. These functional connectivity differences were related to dance skill and balance and training-induced structural characteristics. Our findings have the potential to inform future study designs aiming to monitor dance training-induced plasticity in clinical populations.
舞蹈——作为一种仪式、治疗方法和休闲活动——已经存在了数千年。如今,舞蹈越来越多地被用作治疗认知和神经疾病的方法,如痴呆症和帕金森病。令人惊讶的是,尽管此类信息对于规划成功的临床干预措施至关重要,但舞蹈训练对健康年轻大脑的影响却尚未得到充分了解。因此,本研究以积极参与、接受过专家级训练的大学生为模型,来研究长期接触舞蹈训练的情况。为了研究舞蹈训练对人类大脑的长期影响,我们将20名体重指数正常的年轻专家级女性舞者与20名年龄和教育程度匹配的非舞者在大脑结构和功能方面进行了比较。我们使用了扩散张量成像、形态测量、静息态和任务相关功能磁共振成像、广泛的认知评估以及选定舞蹈技能的客观测量方法(《舞力中央》视频游戏和一项平衡任务)。舞者在《舞力中央》视频游戏和平衡任务中表现出色,但在认知能力方面没有差异。我们几乎没有发现舞者大脑体积存在与训练相关差异的证据。舞者的皮质脊髓束各向异性较低。在观看舞蹈序列时,她们比非舞者更大程度地激活了(AON)。舞者的AON以及一般运动学习网络的功能连接发生了改变。这些功能连接差异与舞蹈技能、平衡以及训练引起的结构特征有关。我们的研究结果有可能为未来旨在监测舞蹈训练在临床人群中引起的可塑性的研究设计提供参考。