Alain Claude, Moussard Aline, Singer Julia, Lee Yunjo, Bidelman Gavin M, Moreno Sylvain
Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Centre de Recherche de l'Institut Universitaire de Gériatrie de Montréal, Université de Montréal, Montréal, QC, Canada.
Front Neurosci. 2019 Mar 8;13:182. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2019.00182. eCollection 2019.
Cognitive decline is an unavoidable aspect of aging that impacts important behavioral and cognitive skills. Training programs can improve cognition, yet precise characterization of the psychological and neural underpinnings supporting different training programs is lacking. Here, we assessed the effect and maintenance (3-month follow-up) of 3-month music and visual art training programs on neuroelectric brain activity in older adults using a partially randomized intervention design. During the pre-, post-, and follow-up test sessions, participants completed a brief neuropsychological assessment. High-density EEG was measured while participants were presented with auditory oddball paradigms (piano tones, vowels) and during a visual GoNoGo task. Neither training program significantly impacted psychometric measures, compared to a non-active control group. However, participants enrolled in the music and visual art training programs showed enhancement of auditory evoked responses to piano tones that persisted for up to 3 months after training ended, suggesting robust and long-lasting neuroplastic effects. Both music and visual art training also modulated visual processing during the GoNoGo task, although these training effects were relatively short-lived and disappeared by the 3-month follow-up. Notably, participants enrolled in the visual art training showed greater changes in visual evoked response (i.e., N1 wave) amplitude distribution than those from the music or control group. Conversely, those enrolled in music showed greater response associated with inhibitory control over the right frontal scalp areas than those in the visual art group. Our findings reveal a causal relationship between art training (music and visual art) and neuroplastic changes in sensory systems, with some of the neuroplastic changes being specific to the training regimen.
认知衰退是衰老过程中不可避免的一个方面,它会影响重要的行为和认知技能。训练项目可以改善认知能力,但目前缺乏对支持不同训练项目的心理和神经基础的精确描述。在这里,我们采用部分随机干预设计,评估了为期3个月的音乐和视觉艺术训练项目对老年人神经电活动的影响及维持效果(3个月随访)。在预测试、后测试和随访测试期间,参与者完成了一项简短的神经心理学评估。在参与者接受听觉oddball范式(钢琴音调、元音)时以及视觉GoNoGo任务期间,测量了高密度脑电图。与非活动对照组相比,这两个训练项目均未对心理测量指标产生显著影响。然而,参加音乐和视觉艺术训练项目的参与者对钢琴音调的听觉诱发反应增强,这种增强在训练结束后可持续长达3个月,表明存在强大且持久的神经可塑性效应。音乐和视觉艺术训练在GoNoGo任务期间也调节了视觉处理,尽管这些训练效果相对短暂,在3个月随访时消失。值得注意的是,参加视觉艺术训练的参与者在视觉诱发反应(即N1波)幅度分布上的变化比音乐组或对照组更大。相反,参加音乐训练的参与者在右侧额部头皮区域与抑制控制相关的反应比视觉艺术组更大。我们的研究结果揭示了艺术训练(音乐和视觉艺术)与感觉系统神经可塑性变化之间的因果关系,其中一些神经可塑性变化特定于训练方案。