Abstract

Aging is associated with deterioration of skilled manual movement. Specifically, aging corresponds with increased reaction time, greater movement duration, segmentation of movement, increased movement variability, and reduced ability to adapt to external forces and inhibit previously learned sequences. Moreover, it is thought that decreased lateralization of neural function in older adults may point to increased neural recruitment as a compensatory response to deterioration of key frontal and intra-hemispheric networks, particularly of callosal structures. However, factors that mediate age-related motor decline are not well understood. Here we show that music training in childhood is associated with reduced age-related decline of bimanual and unimanual motor skills in a MIDI keyboard motor learning task. Compared to older adults without music training, older adults with more than a year of music training demonstrated proficient bimanual and unimanual movement, evidenced by enhanced speed and decreased movement errors. Further, this group demonstrated significantly better implicit learning in the weather prediction task, a non-motor task. The performance of older adults with music training in those tasks was comparable to young adults. Older adults, however, displayed greater verbal ability compared to young adults irrespective of a past history of music training. Our results indicate that music training early in life may reduce age-associated decline of neural motor and cognitive networks.

Highlights

  • Aging impacts many critical aspects of movement and cognition

  • Our results indicate that childhood experiences such as music training may have a protective effect on age-associated decline of neural motor networks

  • For all variables, motor performance was negatively related to the number of years of music training in M+ subjects (Table 3; Figure 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Aging is implicated in slower reaction times (Riecker et al, 2006; Poston et al, 2009) and slower execution of movement during standardized motor tests (Ruiz et al, 2007), drawing tasks (Lee et al, 2010), and reaching movements (Rossit and Harvey, 2008; Poston et al, 2009; Verrel et al, 2012). Age-related cognitive decline involves attention and visuoperceptual abilities (Ardila et al, 2000; Yochim et al, 2009), which in turn may affect motor skill learning

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