A new study published in the journal Psychophysiology reveals that listening to music can alter brain connectivity and improve a person’s ability to estimate the passage of time. The research offers a window into how auditory experiences can temporarily reshape brain function and how long-term training creates a more resilient neural architecture for processing time.
The perception of time is a fundamental cognitive process, allowing us to judge durations and sequence events. This internal sense of timing is not perfectly constant; it can be influenced by external factors, including music, which can act as a powerful synchronizing agent for brain rhythms.
A team of researchers from the University of Guadalajara, led by neuroscientist Julieta Ramos-Loyo, sought to understand the neural underpinnings of this phenomenon. Building on previous work that showed music could improve timing accuracy in non-musicians, they designed a study to directly compare the brain activity of musicians and non-musicians to see how their neural networks responded differently to a musical cue before a timing task.
To investigate these brain dynamics, the scientists focused on the concept of functional connectivity. This refers to the synchronized activity between different brain regions, indicating that they are communicating and working together as a network.
Using electroencephalography, a technique that measures electrical activity from the scalp, they could map these communication patterns. They assessed the brain networks using several key metrics. One is global efficiency, which measures how well information is integrated across the entire brain, reflecting the efficiency of long-range connections. Another is local efficiency, which gauges the brain’s capacity for specialized processing within densely interconnected local clusters of regions. A third measure, network density, quantifies the overall strength of connections within the brain.
The investigation involved two groups of young men: one composed of 26 individuals with over a decade of formal musical training and another with 28 individuals with no such training. Each participant performed a time production task, which required them to estimate a 2.5-second interval by pressing a key. They completed this task under two conditions: once in silence and once after listening to a segment of instrumental electronic music. The researchers recorded their brain’s electrical activity at rest, while listening to the music, and during both versions of the timing task.
Analysis of the behavioral results confirmed the researchers’ initial expectations about timing ability. The non-musicians tended to overestimate the 2.5-second interval when performing the task in silence. After listening to music, however, their accuracy improved significantly, with their estimates becoming closer to the target duration.
In contrast, the musicians were more accurate than the non-musicians from the outset and showed no change in their performance after hearing the music. Their highly trained sense of time appeared less susceptible to influence from the external musical stimulus.
The brain connectivity data provided a potential explanation for these behavioral differences. Even in a resting state, before any task began, the brains of musicians and non-musicians were organized differently. Musicians exhibited a greater number of long-distance connections that linked frontal and posterior regions of the brain.
Non-musicians, on the other hand, showed more localized connectivity, with stronger connections within separate anterior and posterior clusters. This suggests that the musicians’ brains maintain a more globally integrated network as a baseline state.
These distinct patterns became more pronounced during the experiment. Across all conditions, the musicians’ brains displayed consistently higher global efficiency. This indicates that their neural networks are configured for more effective, large-scale communication, allowing for the rapid integration of information from distributed brain regions. This globally efficient network may support their superior and more stable time-keeping abilities.
Conversely, the brains of non-musicians showed higher local efficiency. This pattern points toward a more segregated mode of processing, where specialized information is handled within localized modules rather than being integrated across the entire brain.
The overall network density was also higher in musicians, suggesting a greater number of functional connections were active in their brains throughout the tasks. Listening to music appeared to modulate the connectivity of non-musicians, particularly by strengthening connections in posterior brain regions, which coincided with their improved timing performance.
The researchers propose that these findings reflect two different strategies for processing time, shaped by experience. The non-musicians’ more malleable, locally organized network benefited from the synchronizing effect of the music, which may have helped to organize the neural activity needed for the timing task.
The musicians’ brains, molded by years of training, already operate with a highly integrated, globally efficient network optimized for temporal processing. This pre-existing state of organization makes them both more accurate at timing and less influenced by external cues.
The study is not without its limitations. The participants were all young men, so the findings may not generalize to women or individuals in other age groups. The experiment also used a single piece of electronic music at a moderate tempo; different musical genres or speeds could yield different results.
Future research could explore these variables to build a more complete picture of how music interacts with the brain’s time-keeping mechanisms. Additionally, physiological measures of arousal could help determine its contribution to the observed effects.
The study, “Listening to Music Modulates EEG Functional Connectivity During Subsequent Time Estimation: A Comparative Study Between Musicians and Non-Musicians,” was authored by Julieta Ramos-Loyo, Luis P. Ruiz Gómez, and Sergio I. Rivera-Tello.