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Musical training improves fine motor function in adolescents

Andrea Berencsi, Ferenc Gombos, Patrícia Gerván, Zsófia Tróznai, Katinka Utczás, Gyöngyi Oláh, Ilona Kovács

2022Trends in Neuroscience and Education10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Adolescence is a sensitive period in motor development but little is known about how long-term learning dependent processes shape hand function in tasks of different complexity. PROCEDURE: We mapped two fundamental aspects of hand function: simple repetitive and complex sequential finger movements, as a function of the length of musical instrumental training. We controlled maturational factors such as chronological and biological age of adolescent female participants (11 to 15 years of age, n = 114). RESULTS: We demonstrated that experience improves performance as a function of task complexity, the more complex task being more susceptible for experience driven performance changes. CONCLUSION: Overall, these results suggest that fine motor skills involving cognitive control and relying on long-range functional brain networks are substantially shaped by experience. On the other hand, performance in a simple repetitive task that explains fine motor speed is primarily determined by white matter development driven by maturational factors.

Topics & Concepts

Task (project management)Motor skillCognitionFunction (biology)PsychologyMotor learningCognitive psychologyMotor functionSimple (philosophy)Range (aeronautics)Motor controlNeuroscienceDevelopmental psychologyComputer sciencePhysical medicine and rehabilitationBiologyMedicineEvolutionary biologyComposite materialMaterials scienceEpistemologyEconomicsManagementPhilosophyNeuroscience and Music PerceptionMotor Control and AdaptationChildren's Physical and Motor Development
Musical training improves fine motor function in adolescents | Litcius