Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Parker A" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Tuned to walk: cue type, beat perception, and gait dynamics during rhythmic stimulation in aging Parker A; Dalla Bella S; Penhune VB; Young L; Grenet D; Li KZH; 41661338
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Rhythm and Melody Tasks for School-Aged Children With and Without Musical Training: Age-Equivalent Scores and Reliability Ireland K; Parker A; Foster N; Penhune V; 29674984
PSYCHOLOGY
3 RNA-Based Therapy Utilizing Oculopharyngeal Muscular Dystrophy Transcript Knockdown and Replacement. Abu-Baker A, Kharma N, Perreault J, Grant A, Shekarabi M, Maios C, Dona M, Neri C, Dion PA, Parker A, Varin L, Rouleau GA 30831428
BIOLOGY
4 Predictors of death anxiety among patients with heart disease. Soleimani MA, Bahrami N, Zarabadi-Pour S, Motalebi SA, Parker A, Chan YH 30407129
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Rhythm and Melody Tasks for School-Aged Children With and Without Musical Training: Age-Equivalent Scores and Reliability
Authors:Ireland KParker AFoster NPenhune V
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29674984/
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00426
Publication:Frontiers in psychology
Keywords:age-equivalent scoresdiscriminationmusical tasksschool-aged childrensynchronization
PMID:29674984 Category:Front Psychol Date Added:2019-06-07
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Penhune Laboratory for Motor Learning and Neural Plasticity, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 International Laboratory for Brain, Music and Sound Research, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

Measuring musical abilities in childhood can be challenging. When music training and maturation occur simultaneously, it is difficult to separate the effects of specific experience from age-based changes in cognitive and motor abilities. The goal of this study was to develop age-equivalent scores for two measures of musical ability that could be reliably used with school-aged children (7-13) with and without musical training. The children's Rhythm Synchronization Task (c-RST) and the children's Melody Discrimination Task (c-MDT) were adapted from adult tasks developed and used in our laboratories. The c-RST is a motor task in which children listen and then try to synchronize their taps with the notes of a woodblock rhythm while it plays twice in a row. The c-MDT is a perceptual task in which the child listens to two melodies and decides if the second was the same or different. We administered these tasks to 213 children in music camps (musicians, n = 130) and science camps (non-musicians, n = 83). We also measured children's paced tapping, non-paced tapping, and phonemic discrimination as baseline motor and auditory abilities We estimated internal-consistency reliability for both tasks, and compared children's performance to results from studies with adults. As expected, musically trained children outperformed those without music lessons, scores decreased as difficulty increased, and older children performed the best. Using non-musicians as a reference group, we generated a set of age-based z-scores, and used them to predict task performance with additional years of training. Years of lessons significantly predicted performance on both tasks, over and above the effect of age. We also assessed the relation between musician's scores on music tasks, baseline tasks, auditory working memory, and non-verbal reasoning. Unexpectedly, musician children outperformed non-musicians in two of three baseline tasks. The c-RST and c-MDT fill an important need for researchers interested in evaluating the impact of musical training in longitudinal studies, those interested in comparing the efficacy of different training methods, and for those assessing the impact of training on non-musical cognitive abilities such as language processing.





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