Scientific journal paper Q1
Does music training improve emotion recognition and cognitive abilities? Longitudinal and correlational evidence from children
Leonor Neves (Neves, L.); Marta Martins (Martins, M.); Ana Isabel Correia (Correia, A. I.); São Luís Castro (Castro, S. L.); Edward Schellenberg (Schellenberg, E. G.); César Lima (Lima, C. F.);
Journal Title
Cognition
Year (definitive publication)
2025
Language
English
Country
United States of America
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Abstract
Music training is widely claimed to enhance nonmusical abilities, yet causal evidence remains inconclusive. Moreover, research tends to focus on cognitive over socioemotional outcomes. In two studies, we investigated whether music training improves emotion recognition in voices and faces among school-aged children. We also examined music-training effects on musical abilities, motor skills (fine and gross), broader socioemotional functioning, and cognitive abilities including nonverbal reasoning, executive functions, and auditory memory (short-term and working memory). Study 1 (N = 110) was a 2-year longitudinal intervention conducted in a naturalistic school setting, comparing music training to basketball training (active control) and no training (passive control). Music training improved fine-motor skills and auditory memory relative to controls, but it had no effect on emotion recognition or other cognitive and socioemotional abilities. Both music and basketball training improved gross-motor skills. Study 2 (N = 192) compared children without music training to peers attending a music school. Although music training correlated with better emotion recognition in speech prosody (tone of voice), this association disappeared after controlling for socioeconomic status, musical abilities, or short-term memory. In contrast, musical abilities correlated with emotion recognition in both prosody and faces, independently of training or other confounding variables. These findings suggest that music training enhances fine-motor skills and auditory memory, but it does not causally improve emotion recognition, other cognitive abilities, or socioemotional functioning. Observed advantages in emotion recognition likely stem from preexisting musical abilities and other confounding factors such as socioeconomic status.
Acknowledgements
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Keywords
Music,Ability,Training,Emotion recognition,Plasticity
  • Basic Medicine - Medical and Health Sciences
  • Psychology - Social Sciences
  • Languages and Literature - Humanities
Funding Records
Funding Reference Funding Entity
LISBOA-01-0145-FEDER-028274 Comissão Europeia
SFRH/BD/135604/2018 Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
PTDC/PSI-GER/28274/2017 C.F.L.
UIBD/00050/2020 Centro de Psicologia da Universidade do Porto
POCI-01-0145-FEDER-028274 Comissão Europeia
CEECIND/03266/2018 E.G.S.