Just Let Go: Studying the Brain on Jazz

by Jordan Yerman | March 7, 2008 at 10:50 am
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"Jazz Prelude 2" -David Ives, pianoforte

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"Jazz Prelude 2"  -David Ives, pianoforte

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Pat Metheny and Brad Mehldau rocked the Orpheum Theatre Last Sunday Night

Pat Metheny and Brad Mehldau rocked the Orpheum Theatre Last Sunday Night

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Turns out that music really can alter your brain, or at least making it can. A recently-published study tracks the activity in jazz musicians' brains as they do their thing, and it's really cool (that's the scientific term) to see what we all guessed actually turn out to be quantifiable.
A pair of Johns Hopkins and government scientists have discovered that when jazz musicians improvise, their brains turn off areas linked to self-censoring and inhibition, and turn on those that let self-expression flow.
It appears, they conclude, that jazz musicians create their unique improvised riffs by turning off inhibition and turning up creativity.
Check out their findings, with a decidedly unjazzy title:
To investigate the neural substrates that underlie spontaneous musical performance, we examined improvisation in professional jazz pianists using functional MRI. By employing two paradigms that differed widely in musical complexity, we found that improvisation (compared to production of over-learned musical sequences) was consistently characterized by a dissociated pattern of activity in the prefrontal cortex: extensive deactivation of dorsolateral prefrontal and lateral orbital regions with focal activation of the medial prefrontal (frontal polar) cortex. Such a pattern may reflect a combination of psychological processes required for spontaneous improvisation, in which internally motivated, stimulus-independent behaviors unfold in the absence of central processes that typically mediate self-monitoring and conscious volitional control of ongoing performance. Changes in prefrontal activity during improvisation were accompanied by widespread activation of neocortical sensorimotor areas (that mediate the organization and execution of musical performance) as well as deactivation of limbic structures (that regulate motivation and emotional tone). This distributed neural pattern may provide a cognitive context that enables the emergence of spontaneous creative activity.
I was pointed to this study by boingboing.

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PEP
PEP
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 02:45 on March 8th, 2008

jordan, I like this story. It's good stuff. Take Five!

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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