Groussard Mathilde, Coppalle Renaud, Hinault Thomas, Platel Hervé
UNICAEN, PSL Research University, EPHE, INSERM, U1077, CHU de Caen, Cyceron, Neuropsychologie et Imagerie de la Mémoire Humaine, Normandie Université, Caen, France.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2020 Sep 15;14:557642. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2020.557642. eCollection 2020.
The effects of musical practice on cognition are well established yet rarely compared with other kinds of artistic training or expertise. This study aims to compare the possible effect of musical and theater regular practice on cognition across the lifespan. Both of these artistic activities require many hours of individual or collective training in order to reach an advanced level. This process requires the interaction between higher-order cognitive functions and several sensory modalities (auditory, verbal, visual and motor), as well as regular learning of new pieces. This study included participants with musical or theater practice, and healthy controls matched for age (18-84 years old) and education. The objective was to determine whether specific practice in these activities had an effect on cognition across the lifespan, and a protective influence against undesirable cognitive outcomes associated with aging. All participants underwent a battery of cognitive tasks that evaluated processing speed, executive function, fluency, working memory, verbal and visual long-term memories, and non-verbal reasoning abilities. Results showed that music and theater artistic practices were strongly associated with cognitive enhancements. Participants with musical practice were better in executive functioning, working memory and non-verbal reasoning, whereas participants with regular acting practice had better long-term verbal memory and fluency performance. Thus, taken together, results suggest a differential effect of these artistic practices on cognition across the lifespan. Advanced age did not seem to reduce the benefit, so future studies should focus on the hypothetical protective effects of artistic practice against cognitive decline.
音乐练习对认知的影响已得到充分证实,但很少与其他类型的艺术训练或专业技能进行比较。本研究旨在比较音乐和戏剧定期练习对全生命周期认知的可能影响。这两种艺术活动都需要大量的个人或集体训练才能达到高级水平。这个过程需要高阶认知功能与多种感觉模态(听觉、言语、视觉和运动)之间的相互作用,以及对新作品的定期学习。本研究纳入了有音乐或戏剧练习经历的参与者,以及年龄(18 - 84岁)和教育程度相匹配的健康对照组。目的是确定这些活动中的特定练习是否对全生命周期的认知有影响,以及对与衰老相关的不良认知结果是否有保护作用。所有参与者都接受了一系列认知任务,这些任务评估了处理速度、执行功能、流畅性、工作记忆、言语和视觉长期记忆以及非言语推理能力。结果表明,音乐和戏剧艺术练习与认知增强密切相关。有音乐练习经历的参与者在执行功能、工作记忆和非言语推理方面表现更好,而有定期表演练习经历的参与者在长期言语记忆和流畅性表现方面更好。因此,综合来看,结果表明这些艺术练习对全生命周期的认知有不同的影响。高龄似乎并未减少这种益处,所以未来的研究应关注艺术练习对认知衰退的假设性保护作用。