Learning A New Language Enhances The Processing Of Music In Brain, New Study Finds

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Brain News: A music-related hobby can enhance language skills and affect the processing of speech in the brain and vice-versa because the musical and linguistic functions of a developing brain are closely linked to each other.

Research Director Mari Tervaniemi from the University of Helsinkiโ€™s Faculty of Educational Sciences in cooperation with researchers from the Beijing Normal University (BNU) and the University of Turku, investigated the link between musical and linguistic functions in a developing brain.

Researchers investigated the effects of music and foreign language training on auditory neurocognition in Chinese children aged 8โ€“11 years. The team compared the brain responses associated with auditory processing before and after the training programs and also compared the data of children who attended a music training program with that of children who attended a similar program for the English language.

โ€œThe results demonstrated that both the music and the language program had an impact on the neural processing of auditory signals,โ€ Tervaniemi says.

The findings revealed that learning a new language facilitated the childrenโ€™s early auditory predictive brain processes significantly more than did the music program. The results support the theory that in a developing brain the musical and linguistic functions are closely linked. The new study showed that learning achievements extend from language acquisition to music.

To Know More You May Refer To:

Tervaniemi, M., Putkinen, V., Nie, P., Wang, C., Du, B., Lu, J., Li, S., Cowley, B. U., Tammi, T., & Tao, S. (2021). Improved auditory function caused by music versus foreign language training at school age: Is there a difference? Cerebral Cortex. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhab194


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