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The impact of music training on inhibition control, phonological processing, and motor skills in kindergarteners: a randomized control trial

Jonathan Bolduc, Nathalie Gosselin, Tommy Chevrette, Isabelle Peretz

2020Early Child Development and Care52 citationsDOI

Abstract

This study explores how music training impacts the development of inhibition control, phonological processing, and gross and fine motor skills in preschoolers. In a randomized controlled trial, 160 kindergarteners in a music programme, a motor programme, or a control group were examined. Children in the two experimental conditions took part in 19 weekly 40-minute sessions. At pretest and post-test, inhibition control and phonological processing were measured with two subtests from the NEPSY-II. Gross and fine motricity were assessed with the BOT-2 Short Form. Post-test results showed that children in the music condition improved significantly on automatic response inhibition. Phonological processing skills did not differ significantly between the two experimental conditions, but the music condition produced significant improvements over control. These findings corroborate previous evidence that music training contributes substantially to develop executive function and phonological awareness in preschoolers.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyGross motor skillTest (biology)Control (management)Randomized controlled trialMotor skillPhonological awarenessMusic educationDevelopmental psychologyAudiologyPedagogyMedicineLiteracySurgeryManagementPaleontologyEconomicsBiologyNeuroscience and Music PerceptionReading and Literacy DevelopmentCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skills
The impact of music training on inhibition control, phonological processing, and motor skills in kindergarteners: a randomized control trial | Litcius