Repository logo
 
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Associations between music training and cognitive abilities: The special case of professional musicians

Use this identifier to reference this record.
Name:Description:Size:Format: 
03._Vincenzi_et_al.__in_press_.pdf912.36 KBAdobe PDF Download

Advisor(s)

Abstract(s)

We sought to clarify the commonly accepted link between music training and cognitive ability. Professional musicians, nonprofessionals with music training, and musically untrained individuals (N = 642) completed measures of musical ability, personality, and general cognitive ability. Professional musicians scored highest on objective and self-report measures of musical ability. On personality measures, professional musicians and musically trained participants scored similarly but higher than untrained participants on agreeableness, openness-to-experience, and the personality metatrait stability. The professionals scored higher than the other 2 groups on extraversion and the metatrait engagement. On cognitive ability, however, they were indistinguishable from untrained participants. Instead, musically trained nonprofessionals exhibited the highest cognitive ability. In short, professional musicians differed from other individuals in musical ability and personality, but not in cognitive ability. We conclude that music training predicts higher cognitive ability only among individuals who do not become professional musicians and offer possible explanations.

Description

Keywords

Music Training Cognition Personality Learning

Pedagogical Context

Citation

Vincenzi, M., Correia, A. I., Vanzella, P., Pinheiro, A. P., Lima, C. F., & Schellenberg, E. G. (2022). Associations between music training and cognitive abilities: The special case of professional musicians. Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts. https://doi.org/10.1037/aca0000481

Research Projects

Research ProjectShow more

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Publisher

APA

CC License

Altmetrics