Theta and alpha oscillations may underlie improved attention and working memory in musically trained children

Leonie Kausel, F. Zamorano, P. Billeke, M. E. Sutherland, M. I. Alliende, J. Larrain-Valenzuela, P. Soto-Icaza, F. Aboitiz

Keywords: 2024, 14:e3517.

Abstract

Introduction:Attentionandworkingmemoryarekeycognitivefunctionsthatallowustoselectandmaintaininformationinourmindforashorttime,beingessentialforourdailylifeand,inparticular,forlearningandacademicperformance.Ithasbeenshownthatmusicaltrainingcanimproveworkingmemoryperformance,butitisstillunclearifandhowtheneuralmechanismsofworkingmemoryandparticularlyattentionareimplicatedinthisprocess.Inthiswork,weaimedtoidentifytheoscillatorysignatureofbimodalattentionandworkingmemorythatcontributestoimprovedworkingmemoryinmusicallytrainedchildren.Materials and methods: We recruited children with and without musical trainingandaskedthemtocompleteabimodal(auditory/visual)attentionandworkingmem-ory task, whereas their brain activity was measured using electroencephalography.Behavioral,time–frequency,andsourcereconstructionanalysesweremade.Results:Resultsshowedthat,overall,musicallytrainedchildrenperformedbetteronthe task than children without musical training. When comparing musically trainedchildren with children withoutmusical training, we foundmodulationsin the alphabandpre-stimulionsetandthebeginningofstimulionsetinthefrontalandparietalregions.Thesecorrelatedwithcorrectresponsestotheattendedmodality.Moreover,duringtheendphaseofstimulipresentation,wefoundmodulationscorrelatingwithcorrectresponsesindependentofattentionconditioninthethetaandalphabands,intheleftfrontalandrightparietalregions.Conclusions:Theseresultssuggestthatmusicallytrainedchildrenhaveimprovedneu-ronal mechanisms for both attention allocation and memory encoding. Our resultscanbeimportantfordevelopinginterventionsforpeoplewithattentionandworkingmemorydifficulties.

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Título de la Revista: BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR
Volumen: 14
Número: 5
Editorial: Wiley
Fecha de publicación: 2024
Idioma: Inglés
URL: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/brb3.3517