| Literature DB >> 25566109 |
Nina Kraus1, Jane Hornickel2, Dana L Strait3, Jessica Slater3, Elaine Thompson3.
Abstract
Children from disadvantaged backgrounds often face impoverished auditory environments, such as greater exposure to ambient noise and fewer opportunities to participate in complex language interactions during development. These circumstances increase their risk for academic failure and dropout. Given the academic and neural benefits associated with musicianship, music training may be one method for providing auditory enrichment to children from disadvantaged backgrounds. We followed a group of primary-school students from gang reduction zones in Los Angeles, CA, USA for 2 years as they participated in Harmony Project. By providing free community music instruction for disadvantaged children, Harmony Project promotes the healthy development of children as learners, the development of children as ambassadors of peace and understanding, and the development of stronger communities. Children who were more engaged in the music program-as defined by better attendance and classroom participation-developed stronger brain encoding of speech after 2 years than their less-engaged peers in the program. Additionally, children who were more engaged in the program showed increases in reading scores, while those less engaged did not show improvements. The neural gains accompanying music engagement were seen in the very measures of neural speech processing that are weaker in children from disadvantaged backgrounds. Our results suggest that community music programs such as Harmony Project provide a form of auditory enrichment that counteracts some of the biological adversities of growing up in poverty, and can further support community-based interventions aimed at improving child health and wellness.Entities:
Keywords: auditory training; community music training; electrophysiology; low socioeconomic status/poverty; reading; speech
Year: 2014 PMID: 25566109 PMCID: PMC4268440 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Student instrument experience by site and by instrument.
| Harmony Project site | Typical class participation | Number of students by instrument type |
|---|---|---|
| Alexandria elementary school | -1 h instrumental class twice per week-2 h string ensemble rehearsal weekly | 4 (bass) |
| Beyond the bell | -2 h ensemble rehearsals twice per week (includes pull-out sectional rehearsals) | 12 (2 clarinet, 3 flute, 7 trumpet) |
| EXPO enter (YOLA) | -1 h instrumental class each week-3 h ensemble rehearsal weekly | 5 (2 cello, 1 French horn, 1 viola, 1 trumpet) |
| Hollywood | -1 h instrumental class twice per week-3 h ensemble rehearsal (concert band) weekly | 5 (trumpet) |
(A) Children who are more engaged in music classes have stronger neural encoding of speech after music training for measures previously linked to SES (speech harmonics and response consistency). (B) Neural measures before beginning musical training do not predict subsequent engagement in music classes.
| Music engagement | ||
|---|---|---|
| Percent attendance | Class participation | |
| Speech harmonics | 0.242 (0.235) | |
| Response consistency | ||
| Spontaneous neural activity | -0.201 (0.326) | 0.013 (0.949) |
| Speech harmonics | -0.150 (0.464) | 0.119 (0.562) |
| Response consistency | 0.280 (0.166) | 0.138 (0.502) |
| Spontaneous neural activity | -0.308 (0.126) | -0.212 (0.299) |