Music is similar to language in terms of working memory interference

被引:0
作者
Anna Marie Fennell
Jennifer A. Bugos
Brennan R. Payne
Elizabeth R. Schotter
机构
[1] Columbia University,Department of Counseling and Clinical Psychology, Teachers College
[2] University of South Florida,School of Music
[3] University of Utah,Department of Psychology
[4] University of South Florida ,Department of Psychology
来源
Psychonomic Bulletin & Review | 2021年 / 28卷
关键词
Working memory; Music; Language; Interference;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Some researchers theorize that musicians’ greater language ability is mediated by greater working memory because music and language share the same processing resources. Prior work using working memory sentence processing dual-task paradigms have shown that holding verbal information (e.g., words) in working memory interferes with sentence processing. In contrast, visuospatial stimuli are processed in a different working memory store and should not interfere with sentence processing. We tested whether music showed similar interference to sentence processing as opposed to noninterference like visuospatial stimuli. We also compared musicians to nonmusicians to investigate whether musical training improves verbal working memory. Findings revealed that musical stimuli produced similar working memory interference as linguistic stimuli, but visuospatial stimuli did not—suggesting that music and language rely on similar working memory resources (i.e., verbal skills) that are distinct from visuospatial skills. Musicians performed more accurately on the working memory tasks, particularly for the verbal and musical working memory stimuli, supporting an association between musicianship and greater verbal working memory capacity. Future research is necessary to evaluate the role of music training as a cognitive intervention or educational strategy to enhance reading fluency.
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页码:512 / 525
页数:13
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