Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/35486
Author(s): Grassi, M.
Talamini, F.
Altoè, G.
Brattico, E.
Caclin, A.
Carretti, B.
Drai-Zerbib, V.
Ferreri, L.
Gambarota, F.
Grahn, J.
Fovino, L. G. N.
Samson, S.
Schellenberg, E. G.
Serres, N. R.
Slevc, L. R.
Souffiane, R.-N.
Strauch, F. J.
Strauss, H.
Tantengco, N.
Tervaniemi, M.
Thompson, R.
Timmers, R.
Toiviainen, P.
Trainor, L. J.
Tuske, C.
Villanueva, J.
von Bastian, C. C.
Whiteford, K. L.
Wood, E. A.
Worschech, F.
Zappa, A.
Roccato, M.
Rodriguez-Fornells, A.
Swaminathan, S.
Tillmann, B.
Vuust, P.
Wilbiks, J.
Zentner, M.
Aguilar, K.
Aryanto, C. B.
Leite, F. C. A.
Baldé, A. M.
Başkent, D.
Bishop, L.
Kalsi, G.
Bouwer, F. L.
Calcus, A.
Carraturo, G.
Cepero-Escribano, V.
Čerič, A.
Criscuolo, A.
Dairain, L.
Dalla Bella, S.
Daniel, O.
Danielsen, A.
de Parcevaux, A.-I.
Dellacherie, D.
Endestad, T.
Fialho, J. L. d. B.
Fitzpatrick, C.
Fiveash, A.
Fortier, J.
Fram, N. R.
Fullone, E.
Gloggengießer, S.
Gonzalez Sanchez, L.
Gordon, R. L.
Groussard, M.
Habibi, A.
Hansen, H. M. U.
Harding, E. E.
Hawkins, K.
Herff, S. A.
Holma, V. P.
Jakubowski, K.
Jol, M. G.
Kalsi, A.
Kandro, V.
Kelo, R.
Kotz, S. A.
Ladegam, G. S.
Laeng, B.
Lee, A.
Lense, M.
Lima, C. F.
Limmer, S. P.
Liu, C. K.
Martín Sánchez, P. d. C.
McEntyre, L.
Michael, J. P.
Mirman, D.
Müllensiefen, D.
Najafi, N.
Nokkala, J.
Nzonlang, N.
Oliveira, M. G. M.
Overy, K.
Oxenham, A. J.
Passarotto, E.
Plasse, M.-E.
Platel, H.
Poissonnier, A.
Rajappa, N.
Ritchie, M.
Menezes, I. R. R.
Román-Caballero, R.
Roncaglia, P.
Sa’adullah, F. Y.
Saarikallio, S.
Sammler, D.
Date: 2025
Title: Do musicians have better short-term memory than nonmusicians? A multilab study
Journal title: Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science
Volume: 8
Number: 4
Reference: Grassi, M., Talamini, F., Altoè, G., Brattico, E., Caclin, A., Carretti, B., Drai-Zerbib, V., Ferreri, L., Gambarota, F., Grahn, J., Fovino, L. G. N., Roccato, M., Rodriguez-Fornells, A., Swaminathan, S., Tillmann, B., Vuust, P., Wilbiks, J., Zentner, M., Aguilar, K., ... Zappa, A. (2025). Do musicians have better short-term memory than nonmusicians? A multilab study. Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science, 8(4). https://doi.org/10.1177/25152459251379432
ISSN: 2515-2459
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1177/25152459251379432
Keywords: Musicians
Music training
Nonmusicians
Multilab
Cognitive abilities
Open data
Open materials
Preregistration
Abstract: Musicians are often regarded as a positive example of brain plasticity and associated cognitive benefits. This emerges when experienced musicians (e.g., musicians with more than 10 years of music training and practice) are compared with nonmusicians. A frequently observed behavioral finding is a short-term memory advantage of the former over the latter. Although available meta-analysis reported that the effect size of this advantage is medium (Hedges’s g = 0.5), no literature study was adequately powered to estimate reliably an effect of such size. This multilab study has been ideated, realized, and conducted in lab by several groups that have been working on this topic. Our ultimate goal was to provide a community-driven shared and reliable estimate of the musicians’ short-term memory advantage (if any) and set a method and a standard for future studies in neuroscience and psychology comparing musicians and nonmusicians. Thirty-three research units recruited a total of 600 experienced musicians and 600 nonmusicians, a number that is sufficiently large to estimate a small effect size (Hedges’s g = 0.3) with a high statistical power (i.e., 95%). Subsequently, we measured the difference in short-term memory for musical, verbal, and visuospatial stimuli. We also looked at cognitive, personality, and socioeconomic factors that might mediate the difference. Musicians had better short-term memory than nonmusicians for musical, verbal, and visuospatial stimuli with an effect size of, respectively, Hedges’s gs = 1.08 (95% confidence interval [CI] = [0.94, 1.22]; large), 0.16 (95% CI = [0.02 0.30]; very small), and 0.28 (95% CI = [0.15, 0.41]; small). This work sets the basis for sound research practices in studies comparing musicians and nonmusicians and contributes to the ongoing debate on the possible cognitive benefits of musical training.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CIS-RI - Artigos em revistas científicas internacionais com arbitragem científica

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