Experience Playing a Musical Instrument and Overnight Sleep Enhance Performance on a Sequential Typing Task.

The smooth, coordinated fine motor movements required to play a musical instrument are not only highly valued in our society; they also predict academic success in areas that generalize beyond the motor domain, including reading and math readiness, and verbal abilities. Interestingly, motor skills t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Matthew A Tucker, Nam Nguyen, Robert Stickgold
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4966959?pdf=render
id doaj-d6eae1bdf8be43afb0bfbd1aa2ec38b3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d6eae1bdf8be43afb0bfbd1aa2ec38b32020-11-25T01:32:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01117e015960810.1371/journal.pone.0159608Experience Playing a Musical Instrument and Overnight Sleep Enhance Performance on a Sequential Typing Task.Matthew A TuckerNam NguyenRobert StickgoldThe smooth, coordinated fine motor movements required to play a musical instrument are not only highly valued in our society; they also predict academic success in areas that generalize beyond the motor domain, including reading and math readiness, and verbal abilities. Interestingly, motor skills that overlap with those required to play a musical instrument (e.g., sequential finger tapping) markedly improve (get faster) over a night of sleep, but not after a day spent awake. Here we studied whether individuals who play musical instruments that require fine finger motor skill are better able to learn and consolidate a simple motor skill task compared to those who do not play an instrument, and whether sleep-specific motor skill benefits interact with those imparted by musical experience. We used the motor sequence task (MST), which taps into a core skill learned and used by musicians, namely, the repetition of learned sequences of key presses. Not surprisingly, we found that musicians were faster than non-musicians throughout the learning session, typing more correct sequences per 30-sec trial. In the 12hrs that followed learning we found that sleep and musical experience both led to greater improvement in performance. Surprisingly, musicians retested after a day of wake performed slightly better than non-musicians who had slept between training and retest, suggesting that musicians have the capacity to consolidate a motor skill across waking hours, while non-musicians appear to lack this capacity. These findings suggest that the musically trained brain is optimized for motor skill consolidation across both wake and sleep, and that sleep may simply promote a more effective use of this machinery. In sum, there may be something special about musicians, perhaps a neurophysiological advantage, that leads to both the expected-greater motor speed at learning-and the surprising-greater motor skill improvement over time.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4966959?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew A Tucker
Nam Nguyen
Robert Stickgold
spellingShingle Matthew A Tucker
Nam Nguyen
Robert Stickgold
Experience Playing a Musical Instrument and Overnight Sleep Enhance Performance on a Sequential Typing Task.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Matthew A Tucker
Nam Nguyen
Robert Stickgold
author_sort Matthew A Tucker
title Experience Playing a Musical Instrument and Overnight Sleep Enhance Performance on a Sequential Typing Task.
title_short Experience Playing a Musical Instrument and Overnight Sleep Enhance Performance on a Sequential Typing Task.
title_full Experience Playing a Musical Instrument and Overnight Sleep Enhance Performance on a Sequential Typing Task.
title_fullStr Experience Playing a Musical Instrument and Overnight Sleep Enhance Performance on a Sequential Typing Task.
title_full_unstemmed Experience Playing a Musical Instrument and Overnight Sleep Enhance Performance on a Sequential Typing Task.
title_sort experience playing a musical instrument and overnight sleep enhance performance on a sequential typing task.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description The smooth, coordinated fine motor movements required to play a musical instrument are not only highly valued in our society; they also predict academic success in areas that generalize beyond the motor domain, including reading and math readiness, and verbal abilities. Interestingly, motor skills that overlap with those required to play a musical instrument (e.g., sequential finger tapping) markedly improve (get faster) over a night of sleep, but not after a day spent awake. Here we studied whether individuals who play musical instruments that require fine finger motor skill are better able to learn and consolidate a simple motor skill task compared to those who do not play an instrument, and whether sleep-specific motor skill benefits interact with those imparted by musical experience. We used the motor sequence task (MST), which taps into a core skill learned and used by musicians, namely, the repetition of learned sequences of key presses. Not surprisingly, we found that musicians were faster than non-musicians throughout the learning session, typing more correct sequences per 30-sec trial. In the 12hrs that followed learning we found that sleep and musical experience both led to greater improvement in performance. Surprisingly, musicians retested after a day of wake performed slightly better than non-musicians who had slept between training and retest, suggesting that musicians have the capacity to consolidate a motor skill across waking hours, while non-musicians appear to lack this capacity. These findings suggest that the musically trained brain is optimized for motor skill consolidation across both wake and sleep, and that sleep may simply promote a more effective use of this machinery. In sum, there may be something special about musicians, perhaps a neurophysiological advantage, that leads to both the expected-greater motor speed at learning-and the surprising-greater motor skill improvement over time.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4966959?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT matthewatucker experienceplayingamusicalinstrumentandovernightsleepenhanceperformanceonasequentialtypingtask
AT namnguyen experienceplayingamusicalinstrumentandovernightsleepenhanceperformanceonasequentialtypingtask
AT robertstickgold experienceplayingamusicalinstrumentandovernightsleepenhanceperformanceonasequentialtypingtask
_version_ 1725079662635253760