Abstract

Previous work suggests that musical training in childhood is associated with enhanced executive functions. However, it is unknown whether this advantage extends to selective attention-another central aspect of executive control. We recorded a well-established event-related potential (ERP) marker of distraction, the P3a, during an audio-visual task to investigate the maturation of selective attention in musically trained children and adolescents aged 10-17years and a control group of untrained peers. The task required categorization of visual stimuli, while a sequence of standard sounds and distracting novel sounds were presented in the background. The music group outperformed the control group in the categorization task and the younger children in the music group showed a smaller P3a to the distracting novel sounds than their peers in the control group. Also, a negative response elicited by the novel sounds in the N1/MMN time range (~150-200ms) was smaller in the music group. These results indicate that the music group was less easily distracted by the task-irrelevant sound stimulation and gated the neural processing of the novel sounds more efficiently than the control group. Furthermore, we replicated our previous finding that, relative to the control group, the musically trained children and adolescents performed faster in standardized tests for inhibition and set shifting. These results provide novel converging behavioral and electrophysiological evidence from a cross-modal paradigm for accelerated maturation of selective attention in musically trained children and adolescents and corroborate the association between musical training and enhanced inhibition and set shifting.

Highlights

  • Executive functions (EFs) are top-­down cognitive control processes that enable goal-­directed behavior, planning, and problem solving (Diamond, 2013; Friedman & Miyake, 2017; Jurado & Rosselli, 2007)

  • We investigated the maturation of selective attention in musically trained and untrained children and adolescents aged 10–­17 years using well-e­stablished neural markers (N1/mismatch negativity (MMN), P3a) and audio-v­ isual selective attention task

  • Our main finding was that musically trained children and adolescents showed smaller N1/MMN and late P3a responses relative to the control group and outperformed the untrained peers in the audio-­visual selective attention task

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Summary

Introduction

Executive functions (EFs) are top-­down cognitive control processes that enable goal-­directed behavior, planning, and problem solving (Diamond, 2013; Friedman & Miyake, 2017; Jurado & Rosselli, 2007). Selective attention is the ability to maintain attention towards a target while resisting interference from irrelevant stimuli and is typically considered a central aspect of EFs (cf interference control in Diamond, 2013; and attentional control in Jurado & Rosselli, 2007). Out of the different EFs, selective attention has an evident connection to inhibition and is by some included as a subcomponent of inhibitory control (Diamond, 2013), as it requires suppression of the processing of irrelevant stimuli. Since being able to stay focused in the presence of distracting stimuli is crucial for cognitive development, academic achievement and health, uncovering the neurodevelopmental trajectory of selective attention has been a central goal of cognitive neuroscience and neuropsychology (Stevens & Bavelier, 2012)

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