Does music training improve emotion recognition and cognitive abilities? Longitudinal and correlational evidence from children

IF 2.8 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL
Leonor Neves , Marta Martins , Ana Isabel Correia , São Luís Castro , E. Glenn Schellenberg , César F. Lima
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Abstract

Music training is widely claimed to enhance nonmusical abilities, yet causal evidence remains inconclusive. Moreover, research tends to focus on cognitive over socioemotional outcomes. In two studies, we investigated whether music training improves emotion recognition in voices and faces among school-aged children. We also examined music-training effects on musical abilities, motor skills (fine and gross), broader socioemotional functioning, and cognitive abilities including nonverbal reasoning, executive functions, and auditory memory (short-term and working memory). Study 1 (N = 110) was a 2-year longitudinal intervention conducted in a naturalistic school setting, comparing music training to basketball training (active control) and no training (passive control). Music training improved fine-motor skills and auditory memory relative to controls, but it had no effect on emotion recognition or other cognitive and socioemotional abilities. Both music and basketball training improved gross-motor skills. Study 2 (N = 192) compared children without music training to peers attending a music school. Although music training correlated with better emotion recognition in speech prosody (tone of voice), this association disappeared after controlling for socioeconomic status, musical abilities, or short-term memory. In contrast, musical abilities correlated with emotion recognition in both prosody and faces, independently of training or other confounding variables. These findings suggest that music training enhances fine-motor skills and auditory memory, but it does not causally improve emotion recognition, other cognitive abilities, or socioemotional functioning. Observed advantages in emotion recognition likely stem from preexisting musical abilities and other confounding factors such as socioeconomic status.
音乐训练能提高情绪识别和认知能力吗?来自儿童的纵向和相关证据
人们普遍认为音乐训练可以提高非音乐能力,但因果证据尚无定论。此外,研究倾向于关注认知结果而不是社会情绪结果。在两项研究中,我们调查了音乐训练是否能提高学龄儿童对声音和面孔的情感识别能力。我们还研究了音乐训练对音乐能力、运动技能(精细和粗重)、更广泛的社会情感功能和认知能力(包括非语言推理、执行功能和听觉记忆(短期和工作记忆)的影响。研究1 (N = 110)是在一个自然的学校环境中进行的为期2年的纵向干预,比较音乐训练与篮球训练(主动控制)和不训练(被动控制)。与对照组相比,音乐训练提高了精细运动技能和听觉记忆,但对情绪识别或其他认知和社会情感能力没有影响。音乐和篮球训练都能提高粗大运动技能。研究2 (N = 192)将未接受音乐训练的儿童与参加音乐学校的同龄人进行比较。尽管音乐训练与更好的语音韵律(声调)情感识别相关,但在控制了社会经济地位、音乐能力或短期记忆后,这种关联消失了。相比之下,音乐能力与韵律和面部的情感识别相关,独立于训练或其他混杂变量。这些发现表明,音乐训练可以提高精细运动技能和听觉记忆,但并不能提高情绪识别、其他认知能力或社会情感功能。观察到的情绪识别方面的优势可能源于先前存在的音乐能力和其他混杂因素,如社会经济地位。
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来源期刊
Cognition
Cognition PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
5.90%
发文量
283
期刊介绍: Cognition is an international journal that publishes theoretical and experimental papers on the study of the mind. It covers a wide variety of subjects concerning all the different aspects of cognition, ranging from biological and experimental studies to formal analysis. Contributions from the fields of psychology, neuroscience, linguistics, computer science, mathematics, ethology and philosophy are welcome in this journal provided that they have some bearing on the functioning of the mind. In addition, the journal serves as a forum for discussion of social and political aspects of cognitive science.
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