September 23, 2022

Your Brain on Playing the Piano

 

Want a full body workout? Play the piano! It seems obvious: sensory processing, motor control, hand-eye coordination, mental concentration, mental agility, and multitasking. It also builds mental and muscle memory.

Three parts of the brain particularly benefit from piano playing: the motion, visual and auditory cortices. Both sides of the brain and the bridge between those two sides are involved. It has been found that musicians’ brains can be larger structurally: attention, hearing and listening, emotion, memory, motor actions to produce sound, and learning.

Brain-related reading skills specifically improve with piano playing. Notes constitute a universal and unique language, which necessitate decoding just as alphabetic-based languages do. Beyond reading letters, notes reading is translated into hand motions. Each language has its own rhythm, which can be facilitated through music as composers optimally link oral language with musical rhythm. Indeed, when playing songs in different languages, the performer can cognitively and kinesthetically internalize those language-specific characteristics.

Likewise, mathematical thinking improves with piano playing. Music theory is mathematically-based in notes and rhythm.  The brain processes the combinations and sequencing of those elements, which reflect mathematical patterns.

All ages benefit, even in terms of brain plasticity (making more connections between neurons and creating new circuits, for instance) with consistent piano practice. Such practice also activates creative areas of the brain, facilitating original expression.

Taking piano lessons ramps up the impact of the brain even more: improving reading, expanding vocabulary, interpreting oral prosody emotionally, discerning sounds more subtly, and sequencing verbal information.

In short, playing the piano is a smart idea!