Go Back   Science Forums > General Science Forums > Music studies
Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 02-27-2008   #1 (permalink)
C1ay's Avatar
¿42?

Administrator
Senior Editor
Editor

Location:
33.78N 84.66W
 
C1ay has a reputation beyond reputeC1ay has a reputation beyond reputeC1ay has a reputation beyond reputeC1ay has a reputation beyond reputeC1ay has a reputation beyond reputeC1ay has a reputation beyond reputeC1ay has a reputation beyond reputeC1ay has a reputation beyond reputeC1ay has a reputation beyond repute
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
This Is Your Brain on Jazz

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.

The joint research, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI, and musician volunteers from the Johns Hopkins University's Peabody Institute, sheds light on the creative improvisation that artists and non-artists use in everyday life, the investigators say.

It appears, they conclude, that jazz musicians create their unique improvised riffs by turning off inhibition and turning up creativity.

In a report published Feb. 27 in Public Library of Science (PLoS) ONE, the scientists from the University's School of Medicine and the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communications Disorders describe their curiosity about the possible neurological underpinnings of the almost trance-like state jazz artists enter during spontaneous improvisation.

"When jazz musicians improvise, they often play with eyes closed in a distinctive, personal style that transcends traditional rules of melody and rhythm," says Charles J. Limb, M.D., assistant professor in the Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and a trained jazz saxophonist himself. "It's a remarkable frame of mind," he adds, "during which, all of a sudden, the musician is generating music that has never been heard, thought, practiced or played before. What comes out is completely spontaneous."

Though many recent studies have focused on understanding what parts of a person's brain are active when listening to music, Limb says few have delved into brain activity while music is being spontaneously composed.

Curious about his own "brain on jazz," he and a colleague, Allen R. Braun, M.D., of NIDCD, devised a plan to view in real time the brain functions of musicians improvising.

For the study, they recruited six trained jazz pianists, three from the Peabody Institute, a music conservatory where Limb holds a joint faculty appointment. Other volunteers learned about the study by word of mouth through the local jazz community.

The researchers designed a special keyboard to allow the pianists to play inside a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine, a brain-scanner that illuminates areas of the brain responding to various stimuli, identifying which areas are active while a person is involved in some mental task, for example.

Because fMRI uses powerful magnets, the researchers designed the unconventional keyboard with no iron-containing metal parts that the magnet could attract. They also used fMRI-compatible headphones that would allow musicians to hear the music they generate while they're playing it.

Each musician first took part in four different exercises designed to separate out the brain activity involved in playing simple memorized piano pieces and activity while improvising their music. While lying in the fMRI machine with the special keyboard propped on their laps, the pianists all began by playing the C-major scale, a well-memorized order of notes that every beginner learns. With the sound of a metronome playing over the headphones, the musicians were instructed to play the scale, making sure that each volunteer played the same notes with the same timing.

In the second exercise, the pianists were asked to improvise in time with the metronome. They were asked to use quarter notes on the C-major scale, but could play any of these notes that they wanted.

Next, the musicians were asked to play an original blues melody that they all memorized in advance, while a recorded jazz quartet that complemented the tune played in the background. In the last exercise, the musicians were told to improvise their own tunes with the same recorded jazz quartet.

Limb and Braun then analyzed the brain scans. Since the brain areas activated during memorized playing are parts that tend to be active during any kind of piano playing, the researchers subtracted those images from ones taken during improvisation. Left only with brain activity unique to improvisation, the scientists saw strikingly similar patterns, regardless of whether the musicians were doing simple improvisation on the C-major scale or playing more complex tunes with the jazz quartet.

The scientists found that a region of the brain known as the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, a broad portion of the front of the brain that extends to the sides, showed a slowdown in activity during improvisation. This area has been linked to planned actions and self-censoring, such as carefully deciding what words you might say at a job interview. Shutting down this area could lead to lowered inhibitions, Limb suggests.

The researchers also saw increased activity in the medial prefrontal cortex, which sits in the center of the brain's frontal lobe. This area has been linked with self-expression and activities that convey individuality, such as telling a story about yourself.

"Jazz is often described as being an extremely individualistic art form. You can figure out which jazz musician is playing because one person's improvisation sounds only like him or her," says Limb. "What we think is happening is when you're telling your own musical story, you're shutting down impulses that might impede the flow of novel ideas."

Limb notes that this type of brain activity may also be present during other types of improvisational behavior that are integral parts of life for artists and non-artists alike. For example, he notes, people are continually improvising words in conversations and improvising solutions to problems on the spot. "Without this type of creativity, humans wouldn't have advanced as a species. It's an integral part of who we are," Limb says.

He and Braun plan to use similar techniques to see whether the improvisational brain activity they identified matches that in other types of artists, such as poets or visual artists, as well as non-artists asked to improvise.

This research was funded by the Division of Intramural Research, National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health.

Source: John Hopkins Medicine


----------------
Clay

Editor and Forum Administrator
stego anyone?
Add yourself to Hypography's Frappr.
"There are only 10 kinds of people in the world --
.....Those who understand binary, and those who don't."
"Draw no conclusions before their time."
Reply With Quote
Old 02-27-2008   #2 (permalink)
Turtle's Avatar
Percipient

Platinum Subscription
Sponsor

 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Arrow Re: This Is Your Brain on Jazz

Fascinating! I can only wonder now what do the brains' of jazz listeners glow like. Like craaaazy man.


----------------
semantics is not always just pedantic quibbling. ~ douglas r. hofstadter
Reply With Quote
Old 02-27-2008   #3 (permalink)
Southtown's Avatar
Bury, then water


 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: This Is Your Brain on Jazz

Amjad Ali Khan and Sons Live on the BBC (definitely not jazz)


----------------
Reply With Quote
Old 02-28-2008   #4 (permalink)
Tarantism's Avatar
son et lumire


Location:
In Dark Trees
 
Tarantism is a name known to allTarantism is a name known to allTarantism is a name known to allTarantism is a name known to allTarantism is a name known to all
Send a message via AIM to Tarantism
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: This Is Your Brain on Jazz

So that's why it feels so good.


----------------
-tarantism


Reply With Quote
Old 05-18-2009   #5 (permalink)
enorbet2's Avatar
Understanding


Location:
Does anal retentive require a hyphen, or only a semi-colon?
 
enorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via AIM to enorbet2
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: This Is Your Brain on Jazz

Makes sense. Larry Coryell used to say when he was "on" he became possessed. While in an improv band it was common while listening back to the recording to not recognize myself playing for awhile. Once, I couldn't repeat it even after hearing it. I've heard of other studies that show no other activity ties up as much of the brain at one time as playing music, especially if singing simoultaneously, even when not improv.
Reply With Quote
Old 05-18-2009   #6 (permalink)
freeztar's Avatar
M.C. Grillmeister

Moderator
Editor
Basic Subscription
Sponsor

Location:
ATL, GA, USA
Latest blog entry:
 
freeztar has a reputation beyond reputefreeztar has a reputation beyond reputefreeztar has a reputation beyond reputefreeztar has a reputation beyond reputefreeztar has a reputation beyond reputefreeztar has a reputation beyond reputefreeztar has a reputation beyond reputefreeztar has a reputation beyond reputefreeztar has a reputation beyond reputefreeztar has a reputation beyond reputefreeztar has a reputation beyond repute
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: This Is Your Brain on Jazz

Quote:
Originally Posted by enorbet2 View Post
Makes sense. Larry Coryell used to say when he was "on" he became possessed. While in an improv band it was common while listening back to the recording to not recognize myself playing for awhile. Once, I couldn't repeat it even after hearing it. I've heard of other studies that show no other activity ties up as much of the brain at one time as playing music, especially if singing simoultaneously, even when not improv.
I'd very much like to see those studies if you can find the references.


----------------
Hypography Science Forums Moderator
---
"There are no passengers on Spaceship Earth. We are all crew." - Marshall McLuhan

"We must not forget that when radium was discovered no one knew that it would prove useful in hospitals. The work was one of pure science. And this is a proof that scientific work must not be considered from the point of view of the direct usefulness of it." - Marie Curie
Reply With Quote
Old 05-18-2009   #7 (permalink)
enorbet2's Avatar
Understanding


Location:
Does anal retentive require a hyphen, or only a semi-colon?
 
enorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond reputeenorbet2 has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via AIM to enorbet2
 



Not Ranked  0 score     
Re: This Is Your Brain on Jazz

Hey Freeztar
Just a note to let you know I am following up on the studies that show more different parts of the brain engaged while performing music. I first saw the reference on The Discovery Science Channel several months ago and thought "Hmmm that makes sense especially with instruments that require both hands and both feet, melody and rhythm, speech centers, imagination as well as trained behaviour, memory circuits, auditory feedback and processing, pitch recognition etc - both right hemispheres and left, primitive and higher functions" and let it go at that. Then the program was repeated so I got busy checking it out online. I should have bookmarked it but didn't and while I wasn't using TOR for that session, I do have browser History wiped within minutes on boxes running windoze. So I'm retracing steps. Will post back here soon.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Hypo Jazz Ensemble TheBigDog Music studies 115 10-20-2007 01:53 PM
Random Jazz Scales freeztar Music studies 2 04-06-2007 02:36 PM
Freedom Jazz Dance orbsycli Artists Weightroom 37 03-21-2007 12:58 AM
Tormod: Jazz Scales orbsycli Watercooler 3 05-20-2006 09:18 AM
jazz guitarists orbsycli Watercooler 19 04-12-2006 02:18 AM

» Advertisement
» Current Poll
Who's the sexiest man alive? Johnny Depp or Robert Pattinson?
Johnny Depp - 30.00%
3 Votes
Robert Pattinson - 0%
0 Votes
Someone else (please specify) - 40.00%
4 Votes
I'm too macho to think a guy is sexy - 30.00%
3 Votes
Total Votes: 10
You may not vote on this poll.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 02:37 AM.

Hypography?

Hypography [n.]: A combination of "hyperlink" and "bibliography" - ie, a list of links to electronic documents. Comparable to discography and bibliography, but not cartography.

We have been online since May 2000, and aim to be the best place to find and share science-related content of all kinds.

Share the love!

Please add more science to your life. Use our RSS feeds on your blog, your portal, or your favorite feedreader!


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.3.2
Copyright © 2000-2009 Hypography
Part of the Hypography - Science for Everyone Network