
Dwight Yoakam performing at a music awards ceremony in June
This is Science in the News, in VOA Special English. I’m Christopher Cruise.
 
Today we tell about experiments at a major university in the central  United States. Northwestern University researchers are studying how  music affects the human brain. Jim Tedder has the story.
 
It doesn’t matter whether you play a guitar, a piano, a horn, or a  drum. And what kind of music you play is not important. Maybe you like  to play classical music like this.
 
Or maybe you like to play this kind of music.
 
Or this…
 
Or even this…
 
Just play it! It will do good things for your body because…
 
“We’ve known for some time that playing a musical instrument can change  the anatomy as well as the function…the way the brain works.” 
 
Nina Kraus is a professor at Northwestern University near Chicago,  Illinois. She is also the head of the Auditory-Neuroscience Laboratory,  where she investigates how music affects the human body.
 
Recently, she did tests in her lab using forty-five volunteers. Some of  them had taken music classes and played an instrument, and others had  not.
 
“People will play and study a musical instrument for some time in their  lives and then that’s it! And we wanted to know did this early  experience have a lasting effect on the way the nervous system responded  to sound.”
 
Professor Kraus began by gently placing electrodes onto the heads of  the volunteers. The wires from these electrical devices were then  connected to a computer.
 
“Nerves in your brain that respond to sound give off electricity, and  we can capture that electricity, and we can determine how does your  nervous system respond to speech, to music, to elements of sound that we  think are important for communication.” 
 
One of the simplest sounds played for the volunteers was “da”. Listen carefully because the sound is very short and quick.
 
Here is the sound again. 
 
After the human brain processed the sound, it sounded like this.
 
That sound came through the computer and was played on a speaker. Again…
 
The volunteers also heard other sounds, like this music from the  British rock group Deep Purple. Here is a very small part of the song  “Smoke on the Water.”  Listen carefully.
 
Now, here is what it sounded like on a speaker after going through the brain of a volunteer. 
 
The second sound is not as clear as the first, but it provided the  information needed to be studied on a computer screen.  Ms. Kraus says  she could see an important difference in the way the processed sounds  looked.
 
“These young adults who received formal music instruction as children  had more robust neural responses to sound than peers who had never  participated in music lessons.”  
 
She says she could look at the computer screen and easily see who was a  musician, and who was not. The computer screen’s graph, or picture of  the sound, was larger for the volunteers who played music.
 
Every sound we hear has a main or “fundamental” frequency. This helps  us determine the “pitch”. In music, that helps us decide if one sound,  or musical note, is higher or lower than another. So, for a musician…
 
“The responses to this fundamental frequency that carries pitch  information was simply larger in magnitude…the voltages…the electrical  activity was larger in response to these pitch elements.” 
 
Professor Kraus says the people tested in the experiment could have  been listening to any kind of sound, or any kind of music. They could  even have been asleep. She could still see how their brains were  understanding and identifying what they were hearing.
 
So now we know that the brains of musicians are different from those of  other people. What is the big deal? Why is this important? According to  Nina Kraus, that matters a lot as we get older. Many people notice  that, as the years go by, their hearing gets worse. Just hearing an old  friend’s voice in a noisy place can be difficult. But if you have ever  played a musical instrument…
 
“Your nervous system automatically gets good at responding to sounds that the brain has learned are important.”  
 
So … … …
 
“If you’re talking to me in a noisy restaurant and my nervous system is  very good at locking onto the sound of your voice, then I’m going to be  better able to understand what it is that you say.” 
 
The research at Northwestern University shows that playing a musical  instrument is good for your brain. And although our ears may not work as  well as we age, the brain remembers how to “lock onto” the important  sounds. And that helps us to hear better. 
 
“Musicians become quite good a being able to pull out the part of the  sound that they are interested in listening to. For example, the sound  of their own instrument.” 
 
And there is something else good about playing music…if I could only remember…  
 
Oh, yes! Our brains get better at remembering things. When we play a  piano, for instance, we force our brains to remember the note we just  played. If your brain could talk, it might ask itself, is that the right  sound? Or is it this one? Should I play the notes like this? Or this?  Does this sound better with a major chord…a happier sound? Or a minor  chord, a sadder sound? 
 
Ms. Kraus says when we play a musical instrument we are exercising and  making important electrical connections, or pathways, in our brains.  This might even help our brains when we are trying to learn another  language, or a new subject in school. So, if learning to play a simple  song is good, is it better to try to learn to play something much more  complex, like Bach or Chopin, for example? Professor Kraus says she has  yet to test that proposal, but …
 
“We know that pushing ourselves, physically or intellectually, is very  good for the development of the nervous system. Certainly the more  challenging the task and the more engaging the task, the stronger the  connections are likely to be.” 
 
Over twenty years ago, a French scientist wrote about what he called  the “Mozart Effect”. He said that just listening to the classical music  of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart could help the human brain. Some researchers  said that Mozart’s music would make you smarter, or even help your brain  cure some health disorders. Others said that there was nothing special  about Mozart’s music. Any kind of high energy music would work. So if  the cost of a musical instrument or music lessons is too costly, can we  get the same brain experience just by listening? Ms. Kraus says…no.
 
“Usually people do have teachers, or they can teach themselves. But the  point is they’re actively playing a musical instrument. They’re  actively engaging in making music. We’re not talking about the effects  of simply passively listening to music. I like to give the analogy that  you are not going to get physically fit by watching spectator sports.” 
 
Professor Kraus thinks it would be a very good thing if young people  around the world could take music lessons in school. Even in difficult  economic times, she urges school teachers and the administrators who  control the money, not to cut back on musical training. 
 
“Music, beyond being inherently a wonderful activity in and of itself,  seems to confer benefits that extend outside the music domain, and  extend into areas that are very, very important for human  communication.” 
 
A report on the study was published in the August twenty-second edition  of “The Journal of Neuroscience.” There is much more about Nina Kraus’  work at her website: www.brainvolts.northwestern.edu.
 
She is sure that playing a musical instrument is a really good and  important thing to do. It is fun, and it helps your brain, now and in  the future. 
 
“I’m a biologist and I study learning. Whether it’s music or anything  that we engage in, we are what we do. And our nervous system really  changes according to how we spend our time.”