University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland HES-SO, Geneva School of Health Sciences, Geneva Musical Minds lab (GEMMI lab), Avenue de Champel 47, 1206, Geneva, Switzerland.
Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Geneva, Boulevard Carl-Vogt 101, 1205, Geneva, Switzerland.
BMC Complement Med Ther. 2024 Apr 4;24(1):141. doi: 10.1186/s12906-024-04433-1.
The optimal stimulation for brain development in the early academic years remains unclear. Current research suggests that musical training has a more profound impact on children's executive functions (EF) compared to other art forms. What is crucially lacking is a large-scale, long-term genuine randomized controlled trial (RCT) in cognitive neuroscience, comparing musical instrumental training (MIP) to another art form, and a control group (CG). This study aims to fill this gap by using machine learning to develop a multivariate model that tracks the interconnected brain and EF development during the academic years, with or without music or other art training.
The study plans to enroll 150 children aged 6-8 years and randomly assign them to three groups: Orchestra in Class (OC), Visual Arts (VA), and a control group (CG). Anticipating a 30% attrition rate, each group aims to retain at least 35 participants. The research consists of three analytical stages: 1) baseline analysis correlating EF, brain data, age, gender, and socioeconomic status, 2) comparison between groups and over time of EF brain and behavioral development and their interactions, including hypothesis testing, and 3) exploratory analysis combining behavioral and brain data. The intervention includes intensive art classes once a week, and incremental home training over two years, with the CG receiving six annual cultural outings.
This study examines the potential benefits of intensive group arts education, especially contrasting music with visual arts, on EF development in children. It will investigate how artistic enrichment potentially influences the presumed typical transition from a more unified to a more multifaceted EF structure around age eight, comparing these findings against a minimally enriched active control group. This research could significantly influence the incorporation of intensive art interventions in standard curricula.
The project was accepted after peer-review by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF no. 100014_214977) on March 29, 2023. The study protocol received approval from the Cantonal Commission for Ethics in Human Research of Geneva (CCER, BASEC-ID 2023-01016), which is part of Swiss ethics, on October 25, 2023. The study is registered at clinicaltrials.gov (NCT05912270).
在早期学业阶段,促进大脑发育的最佳刺激因素仍不明确。目前的研究表明,与其他艺术形式相比,音乐训练对儿童执行功能(EF)的影响更为深远。但至关重要的是,在认知神经科学领域,缺乏一项针对音乐乐器训练(MIP)与其他艺术形式以及对照组(CG)的大规模、长期的真实随机对照试验(RCT)。本研究旨在通过使用机器学习来开发一个多元模型来填补这一空白,该模型可在有或没有音乐或其他艺术训练的情况下,跟踪学业期间大脑和 EF 的相互连接的发展。
该研究计划招募 150 名 6-8 岁的儿童,并将他们随机分配到三个组:管弦乐团课(OC)、视觉艺术(VA)和对照组(CG)。预计会有 30%的流失率,因此每个组都希望至少保留 35 名参与者。该研究包括三个分析阶段:1)基线分析,将 EF、大脑数据、年龄、性别和社会经济地位相关联;2)比较组间差异和 EF 大脑及行为发展的随时间变化,以及它们的相互作用,包括假设检验;3)结合行为和大脑数据的探索性分析。干预措施包括每周一次的密集艺术课,以及两年内的增量家庭培训,CG 组则每年接受六次文化出游。
本研究旨在探究密集型团体艺术教育的潜在益处,特别是对比音乐与视觉艺术,对儿童 EF 发展的影响。它将调查艺术丰富如何潜在地影响大约 8 岁左右从更为统一到更为多元化的 EF 结构的假定典型转变,并将这些发现与经过最小化丰富的主动对照组进行比较。这项研究可能会对在标准课程中纳入密集型艺术干预产生重大影响。
该项目于 2023 年 3 月 29 日在经过同行评审后被瑞士国家科学基金会(SNSF no. 100014_214977)接受。研究方案于 2023 年 10 月 25 日获得日内瓦州伦理委员会(CCER,BASEC-ID 2023-01016)的批准,该委员会是瑞士伦理的一部分,该研究在 clinicaltrials.gov 注册(NCT05912270)。