PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Musical activity may improve cognitive aging

Musical activity may improve cognitive aging
2011-04-24
(Press-News.org) ATLANTA – A study conducted by Brenda Hanna-Pladdy, PhD, a clinical neuropsychologist in Emory's Department of Neurology, and cognitive psychologist Alicia MacKay, PhD, found that older individuals who spent a significant amount of time throughout life playing a musical instrument perform better on some cognitive tests than individuals who did not play an instrument.

The findings were published in the April journal Neuropsychology.

While much research has been done to determine the cognitive benefits of musical activity by children, this is the first study to examine whether those benefits can extend across a lifetime.

"Musical activity throughout life may serve as a challenging cognitive exercise, making your brain fitter and more capable of accommodating the challenges of aging," said lead researcher Hanna-Pladdy. "Since studying an instrument requires years of practice and learning, it may create alternate connections in the brain that could compensate for cognitive declines as we get older."

The study enrolled 70 individuals age 60-83 who were divided into three groups. The participants either had no musical training, one to nine years of musical study or at least ten years of musical training. All of the participants had similar levels of education and fitness, and didn't show any evidence of Alzheimer's disease.

Cognitive performance was measured by testing brain functions that typically decline as the body ages, and more dramatically deteriorate in neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's disease.

The high-level musicians who had studied the longest performed the best on the cognitive tests, followed by the low-level musicians and non-musicians, revealing a trend relating to years of musical practice. The high-level musicians had statistically significant higher scores than the non-musicians on cognitive tests relating to visuospatial memory, naming objects and cognitive flexibility, or the brain's ability to adapt to new information.

"Based on previous research and our study results, we believe that both the years of musical participation and the age of acquisition are critical," Hanna-Pladdy says. "There are crucial periods in brain plasticity that enhance learning, which may make it easier to learn a musical instrument before a certain age and thus may have a larger impact on brain development."

The preliminary study was correlational, meaning that the higher cognitive performance of the musicians couldn't be conclusively linked to their years of musical study. Hanna-Pladdy, who has conducted additional studies on the subject, says more research is needed to explore that possible link.



INFORMATION:

The study was conducted with at the University of Kansas Medical Center. At the time of the study, Hanna-Pladdy was an assistant professor in psychiatry at the University of Kansas Medical Center and a research faculty member of the Landon Center on Aging. MacKay, also a former research assistant at the University of Kansas Medical Center, is now an assistant professor of psychology at Tulsa Community College.

The Robert W. Woodruff Health Sciences Center (http://www.whsc.emory.edu/home/about) of Emory University is an academic health science and service center focusing on teaching, research, health care and public service.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Musical activity may improve cognitive aging

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Entrepreneurship urged to stimulate the economy

2011-04-24
Los Angeles, CA (APRIL XX, 2011) Economists have been pointing to the growth in entrepreneurship and small business hiring as two ways the US economy can speed the recovery process. In his first ever Facebook town hall meeting, President Obama expanded upon this search for economic solutions as part of the White House's "Startup America" initiative. Recent articles show that researchers not only support these notions, but also break them down for the nation and the world. Current entrepreneurial scholarship offers studies that provide avenues for future research and ...

LateRooms.com - Munich to Welcome Emmylou Harris

2011-04-24
Country music legend Emmylou Harris is due to make a rare appearance in Munich this summer. The 12-time Grammy winner will play at the German city's Philharmonie venue on Sunday June 5th, giving fans a chance to hear songs from her 40-year career in the music industry. Harris is due to release Hard Bargain, her latest studio LP, via Nonesuch Records on April 26th. The album features a new composition called The Road, which recalls the time the songwriter spent playing and recording with her mentor Gram Parsons during the early 1970s. On her official website, ...

Discovery identifies elaborate G-protein network in plants

Discovery identifies elaborate G-protein network in plants
2011-04-24
The most elaborate heterotrimeric G-protein network known to date in the plant kingdom has been identified by Dr. Sona Pandey, principal investigator at the Danforth Plant Science Center. The results of this research are published in the recent article, "An elaborate heterotirmeric G-protein family from soybean expands the diversity of G-protein networks," in the New Phytologist. G-proteins are signaling proteins that direct a plant's response to various environmental signals including abiotic and biotic stresses such as drought and disease resistance. Prior to Dr. ...

USC research shows critical role of placenta in brain development

2011-04-24
Research at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California's (USC) Zilkha Neurogenetic Institute shows for the first time that the human placenta plays an active role in synthesizing serotonin, paving the way to new treatment strategies that could mitigate health impacts such as cardiovascular disease and mental illness. The groundbreaking findings, conducted with researchers from Vanderbilt University as part of a Silvio Conte Center of Excellence grant from the National Institute of Mental Health, offer conclusive evidence that the placenta provides ...

Drug effective in treating kidney disease in diabetic patients

2011-04-24
Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Mayo Clinic have published promising results of a clinical study using an experimental anti-fibrotic and anti-inflammatory drug called pirfenidone to treat patients with diabetic nephropathy. Their study will be published in the April 21 issue of the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN). Diabetic nephropathy remains the leading cause of end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) in the United States. It is a common complication of diabetes, ...

LateRooms.com - Open de Espana Returns to Barcelona

2011-04-24
It has been more than a decade since Barcelona's Real Club de Golf El Prat hosted the Open de Espana. The competition will make its triumphant return to the Catalan course on May 5th, with many of the top golfing professionals from the European Tour expected to star. As well as the chance to boost their rankings, players are also competing for a prize pot of EUR2 million (GBP1.7 million). The Open de Espana has previously been won by illustrious names such as Sergio Garcia, Padraig Harrington, Colin Montgomerie and Seve Ballesteros. It is one of the oldest tournaments ...

Subset of self-destructive immune cells may selectively drive diabetes

2011-04-24
New research identifies a distinctive population of immune cells that may play a key role in the pathogenesis of diabetes. The research, published by Cell Press and available online in the April 21st issue of Immunity, sheds new light on the pathogenesis of diabetes and may lead to the development of new more selective therapeutic strategies for diabetes and other autoimmune diseases of the accessory organs of the digestive system. Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a chronic autoimmune disease that develops when the immune system destroys insulin-producing cells in the pancreas. ...

Kidney disease coupled with heart disease common problem in elderly

2011-04-24
Patients on peritoneal dialysis (PD) typically have a higher early survival rate than patients on hemodialysis (HD). New data suggest that this difference may be explained by a higher risk of early deaths among patients undergoing HD with central venous catheters, according to a study appearing in an upcoming issue of the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN). In a study that included more than 38,500 Canadian patients starting dialysis between 2001 and 2008, 63 percent started hemodialysis using a central catheter placed into one of the large veins. Seventeen ...

LateRooms.com - See A Hard Merciless Light in Madrid

2011-04-24
Madrid's Museo Nacional de Arte Reina Sofia is showing a collection of pictures from the worker-photography movement between 1926 and 1939. A Hard Merciless Light will be on display until August 22nd 2011, displaying some fascinating examples of images used during that era in the press. The installation explores how the partnership of photography and the leftist worker movement became intertwined and spread from humble beginnings in the Soviet Union to several other countries including the US and Spain. In a statement, the organisers remarked: "The exhibition ...

Say hello to cheaper hydrogen fuel cells

2011-04-24
LOS ALAMOS, New Mexico, April 22, 2011—Los Alamos National Laboratory scientists have developed a way to avoid the use of expensive platinum in hydrogen fuel cells, the environmentally friendly devices that might replace current power sources in everything from personal data devices to automobiles. In a paper published today in Science, Los Alamos researchers Gang Wu, Christina Johnston, and Piotr Zelenay, joined by researcher Karren More of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, describe the use of a platinum-free catalyst in the cathode of a hydrogen fuel cell. Eliminating ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: January 2, 2026

Delayed or absent first dose of measles, mumps, and rubella vaccination

Trends in US preterm birth rates by household income and race and ethnicity

Study identifies potential biomarker linked to progression and brain inflammation in multiple sclerosis

Many mothers in Norway do not show up for postnatal check-ups

Researchers want to find out why quick clay is so unstable

Superradiant spins show teamwork at the quantum scale

Cleveland Clinic Research links tumor bacteria to immunotherapy resistance in head and neck cancer

First Editorial of 2026: Resisting AI slop

Joint ground- and space-based observations reveal Saturn-mass rogue planet

Inheritable genetic variant offers protection against blood cancer risk and progression

Pigs settled Pacific islands alongside early human voyagers

A Coral reef’s daily pulse reshapes microbes in surrounding waters

EAST Tokamak experiments exceed plasma density limit, offering new approach to fusion ignition

Groundbreaking discovery reveals Africa’s oldest cremation pyre and complex ritual practices

First breathing ‘lung-on-chip’ developed using genetically identical cells

How people moved pigs across the Pacific

Interaction of climate change and human activity and its impact on plant diversity in Qinghai-Tibet plateau

From addressing uncertainty to national strategy: an interpretation of Professor Lim Siong Guan’s views

Clinical trials on AI language model use in digestive healthcare

Scientists improve robotic visual–inertial trajectory localization accuracy using cross-modal interaction and selection techniques

Correlation between cancer cachexia and immune-related adverse events in HCC

Human adipose tissue: a new source for functional organoids

Metro lines double as freight highways during off-peak hours, Beijing study shows

Biomedical functions and applications of nanomaterials in tumor diagnosis and treatment: perspectives from ophthalmic oncology

3D imaging unveils how passivation improves perovskite solar cell performance

Enriching framework Al sites in 8-membered rings of Cu-SSZ-39 zeolite to enhance low-temperature ammonia selective catalytic reduction performance

AI-powered RNA drug development: a new frontier in therapeutics

Decoupling the HOR enhancement on PtRu: Dynamically matching interfacial water to reaction coordinates

Sulfur isn’t poisonous when it synergistically acts with phosphine in olefins hydroformylation

[Press-News.org] Musical activity may improve cognitive aging