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воскресенье, 20 декабря 2015 г.
Musicians are better at multitasking
A new study suggests that playing music is instrumental to being able to smoothly switch between tasks
In psychology, the term 'task switching' describes the ability to
quickly shift your attention between two tasks. Previous studies have
suggested that there are many benefits to playing a musical instrument or being bilingual, including enriching mental development and better cognitive function.
A team of psychologists from York University in Canada were
interested in seeing if the skills held by musicians and bilingual
individuals could help them with task switching. They predicted both
groups would perform better than average, but the results showed that
only one outperformed the rest.
The study, published in the journal Cognitive Science,
involved 153 students who were separated into four groups - monolingual
musicians, bilingual musicians, monolingual non-musicians, and
bilingual non-musicians. The musicians had an average of 12 years of
formal musical training, and 88 percent of them were instrumentalists.
The participants were asked to complete a number of tests that
measured their ability to switch between two mental tasks. In one
activity, they were “required to track a moving white dot (while) at the
same time, they attended to single capitalized serif letters flashing
one at a time in the centre of the computer screen. Participants were
required to click the mouse button whenever they saw the target letter
X," says Tom Jacobs from Pacific Standard.
The results showed that the musicians performed much better than
non-musicians, but surprisingly, the bilingual participants did not.
"Musicians' extensive training requires maintenance and
manipulation of complex stimuli in memory, such as notes, melody, pitch,
rhythm, dynamics, and the emotional tone of a musical piece," write the authors of the study.
They report that this meticulous training "may help them to develop
superior control to respond efficiently to stimuli in an environment
where both switching and non-switching components exist."
More research is yet to be done, but in the meantime, why not tune up on your multitasking skills by learning an instrument.
The first language you learn affects how you hear all others, study finds
New research offers fresh insight into how the first language we
learn affects our experience of all the subsequent ones we come across.
Scientists in Canada have found that our original language creates certain patterns in the brain that are perhaps never lost.
The influence of this 'locking in' of the brain is still evident
even when all knowledge of the first language has disappeared from
memory. It appears to inform the way we hear the sounds and words of
subsequent languages we come into contact with during our lives, as
though our brains have become hardwired in one particular formation or
tuned to one particular language.
The team from McGill University and the Montreal Neurological Institute looked at three groups of adolescents: those who only speak French, those who speak both French and Chinese fluently, and adopted teens who originally knew Chinese as babies but now only speak French.
MRI scans were used to monitor brain activity while French pseudo-words
were played. Interestingly, the same areas of the brain 'lit up' in the
bilingual speakers and the monolingual speakers who originally knew
Chinese.
In those who had known Chinese at a very early age but are no
longer bilingual, their brains handled words as if they still were. The
researchers think this could help us understand more about how we learn
languages and how that process changes as we get older.
"The adopted children we tested have an interesting background
because they were exposed to one language from birth, but completely
discontinued that language at a young age when they were adopted into
families who speak a different language," said one of the researchers,
Lara Pierce. "This is very interesting from a language development
perspective because it allows us to look at the influence of just that
very early period of language development on later language processing,
separately from the effects of ongoing exposure to one or more
languages."
It may help explain why learning a language as a baby is so
effortless and why it becomes much harder later in life, at least for
some of us: our brains have already been 'set' in a certain
configuration. As Pierce notes,
very young children have been shown to be incredibly adept in picking
out words that help in their language learning and dismissing other
sounds - a skill we tend to lose in later life.
The study has been published in Nature Communications.
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