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Does listening to Mozart's music influence visuospatial short-term memory in young adults?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

V. Giannoul
Affiliation:
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, School of Medicine, Drama, Greece
S. Popa
Affiliation:
State University of Moldova, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, Chişinău, Moldova

Abstract

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Introduction

Music is claimed to improve mental function and many researchers claim that this effect related to Mozart's music is limited to enhancement of the spatial temporal reasoning and not to other cognitive functions.

Objectives

To explore the influence of Mozart's music on visuospatial memory.

Methods

Sixty adults (37 women and 23 men), with Mage = 21.83, SDage = 2.38, Meducation = 14.03, SDeducation = .99, and without any formal musical education were examined through an experimental process. Participants in groups of ten listened to Mozart's sonata for two pianos in D major, K.448, to Mozart's violin concerto No.3 in G major, K.216, and to a no sounds condition in varying order. The participants after listening to each 10-minute condition were presented with a series of randomly generated patterns made up of black squares on a chess-like surface. This was used in order to test the storage capacity of their visuospatial memory. After 3 seconds of presentation for each drawing, they were asked to reproduce by drawing these patterns that progressively got bigger.

Results

Results revealed for all three conditions that the number of correct grid drawings made by the participants was not significantly statistically different (P > 05), and therefore their visuospatial memory retention was not influenced by any kind of music.

Conclusions

Future research could examine in more detail the retention and manipulation of visuospatial information not only in tasks similar to the visual patterns test, but also in different tests used for clinical and non-clinical populations.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster Viewing: Others
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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