Musical practice as an enhancer of cognitive function in healthy aging - A systematic review and meta-analysis
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Román Caballero, Rafael; Arnedo Montoro, María Luisa; Triviño Mosquera, Mónica; Lupiáñez Castillo, JuanEditorial
Plos One
Fecha
2018-11-27Referencia bibliográfica
Román-Caballero R, Arnedo M, Triviño M, Lupiáñez J (2018) Musical practice as an enhancer of cognitive function in healthy aging - A systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS ONE 13(11): e0207957. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207957
Patrocinador
Research project grant (PSI2017-84926-P) Spanish Ministry of Economy, industry and Competitiveness; Predoctoral fellowship (FPU17/02864) by the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and SportResumen
Aging is accompanied by cognitive decline, although recent research indicates that the rate
of decline depends on multiple lifestyle factors. One of such factors is musical practice, an
activity that involves several sensory and motor systems and a wide range of high-level cognitive
processes. This paper describes the first systematic review and meta-analysis, to our
knowledge, of the impact of musical practice on healthy neurocognitive aging. The inclusion
criteria for the review required that studies were empirical works in English or Spanish that
they explored the effects of musical practice on older people; they included an assessment of
cognitive functions and/or an assessment of brain status; and they included a sample of participants
aged 59 years or older with no cognitive impairment or brain damage. This review
led to the selection of 13 studies: 9 correlational studies involving older musicians and nonmusicians
and 4 experimental studies involving short-term musical training programs. The
results of the meta-analysis showed cognitive and cerebral benefits of musical practice, both
in domain-specific functions (auditory perception) and in other rather domain-general functions.
Moreover, these benefits seem to protect cognitive domains that usually decline with
aging and boost other domains that do not decline with aging. The origin of these benefits
may reside, simultaneously, in the specific training of many of these cognitive functions during
musical practice (specific training mechanism), in the improvement of compensatory cognitive
processes (specific compensatory mechanism), and in the preservation of general
functions with a global influence on others, such as perceptual capacity, processing speed,
inhibition and attention (general compensatory mechanism). Therefore, musical practice
seems to be a promising tool to reduce the impact of cognitive problems associated to aging.