Authors
Michael A Cohen, Karla K Evans, Todd S Horowitz, Jeremy M Wolfe
Publication date
2011/6
Journal
Psychonomic bulletin & review
Volume
18
Pages
586-591
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Description
Numerous studies have shown that musicians outperform nonmusicians on a variety of tasks. Here we provide the first evidence that musicians have superior auditory recognition memory for both musical and nonmusical stimuli, compared to nonmusicians. However, this advantage did not generalize to the visual domain. Previously, we showed that auditory recognition memory is inferior to visual recognition memory. Would this be true even for trained musicians? We compared auditory and visual memory in musicians and nonmusicians using familiar music, spoken English, and visual objects. For both groups, memory for the auditory stimuli was inferior to memory for the visual objects. Thus, although considerable musical training is associated with better musical and nonmusical auditory memory, it does not increase the ability to remember sounds to the levels found with visual stimuli. This suggests a …
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Scholar articles
MA Cohen, KK Evans, TS Horowitz, JM Wolfe - Psychonomic bulletin & review, 2011