Fine motor control improves in older adults after 1 year of piano lessons: Analysis of individual development and its coupling with cognition and brain structure

Author:

Worschech Florian12ORCID,James Clara E.34ORCID,Jünemann Kristin25ORCID,Sinke Christopher5ORCID,Krüger Tillmann H. C.25ORCID,Scholz Daniel S.67ORCID,Kliegel Matthias48ORCID,Marie Damien349ORCID,Altenmüller Eckart12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Music Physiology and Musicians' Medicine Hanover University of Music, Drama and Media Hanover Germany

2. Center for Systems Neuroscience Hanover Germany

3. Geneva Musical Minds Lab, Geneva School of Health Sciences University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland HES‐SO Geneva Switzerland

4. Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences University of Geneva Geneva Switzerland

5. Division of Clinical Psychology and Sexual Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, Social Psychiatry and Psychotherapy Hanover Medical School Hanover Germany

6. Department of Musicians' Health University of Music Lübeck Lübeck Germany

7. Department of Neurology University of Lübeck Lübeck Germany

8. Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Gerontology and Vulnerability University of Geneva Geneva Switzerland

9. CIBM Center for Biomedical Imaging MRI HUG‐UNIGE Geneva Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractMusical training can improve fine motor skills and cognitive abilities and induce macrostructural brain changes. However, it is not clear whether the changes in motor skills occur simultaneously with changes in cognitive and neurophysiological parameters. In this study, 156 healthy, musically naïve and right‐handed older adults were recruited and randomly assigned to a piano training or a music listening group. Before, after 6 and 12 months, participants were scanned using MRI and assessed for fine motor skills, auditory working memory and processing speed. A Bayesian multilevel modelling approach was used to examine behavioural and neurophysiological group differences. The relationships between motor and cognitive and between motor and neurophysiological parameters were determined using latent change score models. Compared with music listening, practicing piano resulted in greater improvement in fine motor skills and probably working memory. Only in the piano group, unimanual fine motor skills and grey matter volume of the contralateral M1 changed together during the 6–12‐month period. Additionally, M1 co‐developed with ipsilateral putamen and thalamus. Playing piano induced more prevalent coupling between the motor and cognitive domains. However, there is little evidence that fine motor control develops concurrently with cognitive functions. Playing an instrument promotes motor, cognitive and neural development into older age. During the learning process, the consolidation of piano skills appears to take place in sensorimotor networks, enabling musicians to perform untrained motor tasks with higher acuity. Relationships between the development of motor acuity and cognition were bidirectional and can be explained by a common cause as well as by shared resources with compensatory mechanisms.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Neuroscience

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