Beat Synchronization across the Lifespan: Intersection of Development and Musical Experience.

Rhythmic entrainment, or beat synchronization, provides an opportunity to understand how multiple systems operate together to integrate sensory-motor information. Also, synchronization is an essential component of musical performance that may be enhanced through musical training. Investigations of r...

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Main Authors: Elaine C Thompson, Travis White-Schwoch, Adam Tierney, Nina Kraus
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4481101?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b7f404e3491a4e58b34dc33ffd476de32020-11-24T20:51:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01106e012883910.1371/journal.pone.0128839Beat Synchronization across the Lifespan: Intersection of Development and Musical Experience.Elaine C ThompsonTravis White-SchwochAdam TierneyNina KrausRhythmic entrainment, or beat synchronization, provides an opportunity to understand how multiple systems operate together to integrate sensory-motor information. Also, synchronization is an essential component of musical performance that may be enhanced through musical training. Investigations of rhythmic entrainment have revealed a developmental trajectory across the lifespan, showing synchronization improves with age and musical experience. Here, we explore the development and maintenance of synchronization in childhood through older adulthood in a large cohort of participants (N = 145), and also ask how it may be altered by musical experience. We employed a uniform assessment of beat synchronization for all participants and compared performance developmentally and between individuals with and without musical experience. We show that the ability to consistently tap along to a beat improves with age into adulthood, yet in older adulthood tapping performance becomes more variable. Also, from childhood into young adulthood, individuals are able to tap increasingly close to the beat (i.e., asynchronies decline with age), however, this trend reverses from younger into older adulthood. There is a positive association between proportion of life spent playing music and tapping performance, which suggests a link between musical experience and auditory-motor integration. These results are broadly consistent with previous investigations into the development of beat synchronization across the lifespan, and thus complement existing studies and present new insights offered by a different, large cross-sectional sample.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4481101?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elaine C Thompson
Travis White-Schwoch
Adam Tierney
Nina Kraus
spellingShingle Elaine C Thompson
Travis White-Schwoch
Adam Tierney
Nina Kraus
Beat Synchronization across the Lifespan: Intersection of Development and Musical Experience.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Elaine C Thompson
Travis White-Schwoch
Adam Tierney
Nina Kraus
author_sort Elaine C Thompson
title Beat Synchronization across the Lifespan: Intersection of Development and Musical Experience.
title_short Beat Synchronization across the Lifespan: Intersection of Development and Musical Experience.
title_full Beat Synchronization across the Lifespan: Intersection of Development and Musical Experience.
title_fullStr Beat Synchronization across the Lifespan: Intersection of Development and Musical Experience.
title_full_unstemmed Beat Synchronization across the Lifespan: Intersection of Development and Musical Experience.
title_sort beat synchronization across the lifespan: intersection of development and musical experience.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Rhythmic entrainment, or beat synchronization, provides an opportunity to understand how multiple systems operate together to integrate sensory-motor information. Also, synchronization is an essential component of musical performance that may be enhanced through musical training. Investigations of rhythmic entrainment have revealed a developmental trajectory across the lifespan, showing synchronization improves with age and musical experience. Here, we explore the development and maintenance of synchronization in childhood through older adulthood in a large cohort of participants (N = 145), and also ask how it may be altered by musical experience. We employed a uniform assessment of beat synchronization for all participants and compared performance developmentally and between individuals with and without musical experience. We show that the ability to consistently tap along to a beat improves with age into adulthood, yet in older adulthood tapping performance becomes more variable. Also, from childhood into young adulthood, individuals are able to tap increasingly close to the beat (i.e., asynchronies decline with age), however, this trend reverses from younger into older adulthood. There is a positive association between proportion of life spent playing music and tapping performance, which suggests a link between musical experience and auditory-motor integration. These results are broadly consistent with previous investigations into the development of beat synchronization across the lifespan, and thus complement existing studies and present new insights offered by a different, large cross-sectional sample.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4481101?pdf=render
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