Journal article

MUSIC LESSONS AND INTELLIGENCE: A RELATION MEDIATED BY EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS


Authors listDege, Franziska; Kubicek, Claudia; Schwarzer, Gudrun

Publication year2011

Pages195-201

JournalMusic Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal

Volume number29

Issue number2

ISSN0730-7829

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1525/MP.2011.29.2.195

PublisherUniversity of California Press


Abstract
THE PRESENT STUDY INVESTIGATED WHETHER THE ASSOCIATION between music lessons and intelligence is mediated by executive functions. Intelligence and five different executive functions (set shifting, selective attention, planning, inhibition, and fluency) were assessed in 9- to 12-yearold children with varying amounts of music lessons. Significant associations emerged between music lessons and all of the measures of executive function. Executive functions mediated the association between music lessons and intelligence, with the measures of selective attention and inhibition being the strongest contributors to the mediation effect. Our results suggest that at least part of the association between music lessons and intelligence is explained by the positive influence music lessons have on executive functions, which in turn improve performance on intelligence tests.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleDege, F., Kubicek, C. and Schwarzer, G. (2011) MUSIC LESSONS AND INTELLIGENCE: A RELATION MEDIATED BY EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS, Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 29(2), pp. 195-201. https://doi.org/10.1525/MP.2011.29.2.195

APA Citation styleDege, F., Kubicek, C., & Schwarzer, G. (2011). MUSIC LESSONS AND INTELLIGENCE: A RELATION MEDIATED BY EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS. Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal. 29(2), 195-201. https://doi.org/10.1525/MP.2011.29.2.195



Keywords


ABILITIESchildren and musiccognitive developmentEXECUTIVE FUNCTIONSINTELLIGENCEIQMusic lessons

Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 02:47