학술논문

Long-Known Music Exposure Effects on Brain Imaging and Cognition in Early-Stage Cognitive Decline: A Pilot Study.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease. 2021, Vol. 84 Issue 2, p819-833. 15p.
Subject
*PREFRONTAL cortex
*BRAIN imaging
*COGNITIVE ability
*MONTREAL Cognitive Assessment
*BRAIN anatomy
*MUSIC psychology
*PILOT projects
*FRONTAL lobe
*BRAIN
*RESEARCH
*AUDITORY perception
*BASAL ganglia
*MAGNETIC resonance imaging
*NEUROPLASTICITY
*EVALUATION research
*COMPARATIVE studies
*MUSIC
Language
ISSN
1387-2877
Abstract
Background: Repeated exposure to long-known music has been shown to have a beneficial effect on cognitive performance in patients with AD. However, the brain mechanisms underlying improvement in cognitive performance are not yet clear.Objective: In this pilot study we propose to examine the effect of repeated long-known music exposure on imaging indices and corresponding changes in cognitive function in patients with early-stage cognitive decline.Methods: Participants with early-stage cognitive decline were assigned to three weeks of daily long-known music listening, lasting one hour in duration. A cognitive battery was administered, and brain activity was measured before and after intervention. Paired-measures tests evaluated the longitudinal changes in brain structure, function, and cognition associated with the intervention.Results: Fourteen participants completed the music-based intervention, including 6 musicians and 8 non-musicians. Post-baseline there was a reduction in brain activity in key nodes of a music-related network, including the bilateral basal ganglia and right inferior frontal gyrus, and declines in fronto-temporal functional connectivity and radial diffusivity of dorsal white matter. Musician status also significantly modified longitudinal changes in functional and structural brain measures. There was also a significant improvement in the memory subdomain of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment.Conclusion: These preliminary results suggest that neuroplastic mechanisms may mediate improvements in cognitive functioning associated with exposure to long-known music listening and that these mechanisms may be different in musicians compared to non-musicians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]