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Music Engagement as a Source of Cognitive Reserve

Lee Wolff, Yixue Quan, Gemma Perry, William Forde Thompson

2023American Journal of Alzheimer s Disease & Other Dementias®43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Music engagement is a ubiquitous activity that is thought to have cognitive benefits for the rapidly aging population. In the absence of robust treatment approaches for many age-related and neuropathological health issues, interest has emerged surrounding lifestyle-enriching activities, like exercise and music engagement, to build cognitive reserve across the lifespan and preserve neurocognitive function in older adults. The present review evaluates evidence of neurocognitive preservation arising from lifelong music engagement with respect to the cognitive reserve hypothesis. We collated a body of neuroimaging, behavioral and epidemiological evidence to adjudicate the benefits of music engagement for cognitive reserve. The findings suggest that music engagement should be considered in tandem with other well-established cognitive reserve proxies as a contributor to differential clinical outcomes in older populations at risk of age-related and neuropathological cognitive decline.

Topics & Concepts

NeurocognitiveCognitive reserveCognitionCognitive declinePsychologyCognitive neuropsychologyPopulationGerontologyDementiaMedicineCognitive impairmentNeuropsychologyNeuroscienceDiseasePathologyEnvironmental healthNeuroscience and Music PerceptionMusic Therapy and HealthNeurobiology of Language and Bilingualism
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