Does listening to music increase your ability to discriminate musical sounds?

Laura W. Wesseldijk, Fredrik Ullén, Miriam A. Mosing

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Music listening plays an important role in the daily lives of many. It remains unclear what explains variation in how much time people spend listening to music and whether music listening improves musical auditory discrimination
skills. In 10,780 Swedish twin individuals, data were available on hours of music listening, musical engagement and musical auditory discrimination. Genetic and shared environmental factors together explain half of the variation in music listening in both sexes. Hours of music listening was positively associated with
musical auditory discrimination in both sexes and this effect was independent of whether individuals played a musical instrument. However, the effect disappeared when applying a co-twin control analysis to control for genetic and shared environmental confounding. These findings suggest that music listening may not causally improve musical auditory discrimination skills, but rather that the association is likely due to shared familial factors.
Original languageEnglish
Article number110001
JournalPERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES
Volume161
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 17 Mar 2020

Keywords

  • Genetics
  • Music listening
  • Musical auditory discrimination
  • Shared environment
  • Twins

Cite this