The recently published study sheds light on the molecular mechanisms underlying music therapy.
According to a new study recently published by the University of Helsinki, listening to a favourite piece of classical music can enhance the genes involved with learning and memory whilst inhibiting the genes known to cause neurodegeneration and memory-degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease. The benefits of listening to classical music has been explored in multiple previous studies, including research into improved scholastic achievement and cognitive function in school aged children, and the social advantages of community music in the elderly, but this new study is the first to explore neurological changes at a molecular level.
In the recent effort to better understand the effects of music on our minds, the Finnish study group investigated how listening to classical music affected the “cognitive gene expression profiles” of both classical music lovers and less musically experienced participants. Both groups listened to Mozart’s Violin Concert No 3 in G major as part of the experiment.
The results demonstrated that listening to the music showed enhanced activity of genes involved in dopamine secretion, sometimes called the pleasure hormone, and improved synaptic function leading to better learning and memory.
Perhaps most interestingly...
Continue reading
Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month
Already a subscriber?
Log in
Comments
Log in to join the conversation.