Study shows networking properties
between brains when guitarists play together
Researchers from the Max Planck
Institute for Human Development in Berlin have shown that
synchronization emerges between brains when making music together,
and even when musicians play different voices. In a study published
November 29th in Frontiers in Neuroscience, Johanna Sänger and
her team used electrodes to record the brain waves of guitarists
while they played different voices of the same duet. The results
point to brain synchronicity that cannot be explained away by
similitudes in external stimulation but can be attributed to a more
profound interpersonal coordination.
To test their hypothesis, the
psychologists arranged 32 experienced guitarists in duet pairs, and
recorded electrical activity in different brain regions of each
musician. They were then asked to play a sequence from the "Sonata
in G Major" by Christian Gottlieb Scheidler a total of 60 times,
and the duet partners were given slightly different tasks: each
musician had to play a different voice, and one of the two was
responsible for ensuring that they started at the same time and held
the same tempo. Thus, one person took the lead and the other
followed.
The duet's brain activities showed
coordinated brain oscillations, even when playing different voices of
the same duet. Called phase coherence, this synchronous activity
suggests a direct neural basis for interpersonal coordination.
"When people coordinate their own
actions, small networks between brain regions are formed. But we also
observed similar network properties between the brains of the
individual players, especially when mutual coordination is very
important; for example at the joint onset of a piece of music,"
says Johanna Sänger. The difference between leader and follower was
also reflected in the results of the measurement of electrical
activity captured by electrodes: "In the player taking the lead,
the internal synchronization of an individual's brain waves was
stronger and, importantly, was present already before the duet
started to play," says Johanna Sänger. "This could be a
reflection of the leading player's decision to begin playing at a
certain moment in time," she added.
The current data indicate that
synchronization between individuals occurs in brain regions
associated with social cognition and music production. And such
interbrain networks are expected to occur not only while performing
music. "We think that different people's brain waves also
synchronise when people mutually coordinate their actions in other
ways, such as during sport, or when they communicate with one
another," Sänger says.
Original study:
Johanna Sänger, Viktor Müller and
Ulman Lindenberger:
Intra - and interbrain synchronization
and network properties when playing guitar in duets. Frontiers in
Human Neuroscience, 2012, doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2012.00312
Related article (previous study):
Gehirne im Gleichtakt [Brains in
Sync] http://www.mpg.de/577608/pressemitteilung20090317?filter_order=L

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