Current:Home > FinanceBuilding a better brain through music, dance and poetry -Golden Summit Finance
Building a better brain through music, dance and poetry
View
Date:2025-04-14 21:02:35
To make sense of difficult science, Michael Kofi Esson often turns to art.
When he's struggling to understand the immune system or a rare disease, music and poetry serve as an anchor.
"It helps calm me down and actively choose what to focus on," says Esson, a second-year student at the Medical College of Wisconsin.
Esson, who was born in Ghana, also thinks his brain is better at absorbing all that science because of the years he spent playing the trumpet and studying Afrobeat musicians like Fela Kuti.
"There has to be some kind of greater connectivity that [art] imparts on the brain," Esson says.
That idea — that art has a measurable effect on the brain and its structure — has support from a growing number of scientific studies.
"Creativity is making new connections, new synapses," says Ivy Ross, who is vice president of hardware design at Google and co-author of the New York Times bestseller Your Brain on Art: How the Arts Transform Us.
Ross co-wrote the book with Susan Magsamen, director of the International Arts and Mind Lab at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Magsamen says art's effect on the brain is most dramatic in children.
"Children that are playing music, their brain structure actually changes and their cerebral cortex actually gets larger," Magsamen says.
In Your Brain on Art, Magsamen and Ross describe how a person's neural circuitry changes in response to activities like learning a new song, or a new dance step, or how to play a character onstage.
They also explain why a growing number of researchers believe these changes result in a brain that is better prepared to acquire a wide range of skills, including math and science.
A brain trained to flex
Music, dance, drawing, storytelling — all of these have been a part of human cultures for tens of thousands of years. As a result, "we're really wired for art," Magsamen says.
And when we make art, she says, we increase the brain's plasticity — its ability to adapt in response to new experiences.
"Children who engage in the arts are better learners," Ross says. "Students with access to art education are five times less likely to drop out of school and four times more likely to be recognized with high achievement."
The arts also can teach the brain skills that it's unlikely to get in a classroom, Ross says.
"I was a dancer for like 12 years and I really think it gave me a sense of form and negative space," she says.
Those brain circuits probably helped in her wide-ranging career, she says, which includes designing jewelry that's part of the permanent collection at the Smithsonian.
Dancing also seems to improve mental health, Magsamen says.
"Even just 15 minutes of dance reduces stress and anxiety," she says, noting that the activity causes the brain to release "feel-good" hormones like endorphins, serotonin and dopamine.
Measuring art's effects
The link between arts and academic achievement has been noted by educators for many years. But it's only in the past couple of decades that technology has allowed scientists to see some of the changes in the brain that explain why.
In 2010, for example, scientists used functional magnetic resonance imaging to show that professional musicians had greater plasticity than nonmusicians in the hippocampus, an area involved in storing and retrieving information.
"The arts provide children with the kind of brain development that's really important for building strong neural pathways," Magsamen says, including pathways involved in focus, memory and creativity.
Esson, the medical student, may have been using some of those pathways when he found a novel way to study difficult concepts in chemistry.
"I wrote [poems] about acid-base reactions," he says with a laugh. "Oh my God, just so nerdy."
A failing grade for arts in school
Despite growing evidence that arts can improve performance in many other areas, activities like music and drawing have fallen out of favor in education and our culture, Ross says.
"We optimize for productivity and push the arts aside," she says. "We thought we'd be happy. And the truth is, we're not."
So people like Michael Kofi Esson are trying to find a balance.
Now at the end of his second year of medical school, Esson spends his days on science. But sometimes late at night, he still writes poems, including one that ends with this thought about how art and the brain both create their own version of reality.
Deception is art,
An art the brain has mastered.
Although art is a lie,
It is the brain's truth
Although art is deception,
it is the brain's reality.
The brain is a lie,
a lie so beautiful, it is art.
Esson hopes that one day he will write poems about the patients he treats. For now, though, he's still mostly an observer.
"I get to talk to them. But at the end of the day, they come for the doctor, not for me," he says. "Once I'm actually in that position, I think I want to bring the patient into the poems."
And perhaps bring some of the poems to his patients.
veryGood! (497)
Related
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Gypsy Rose Blanchard to Explore Life After Prison Release in New Docuseries
- Apple TV+ special 'Snoopy Presents: Welcome Home, Franklin' flips a script 50-years deep: What to know
- Car insurance rates jump 26% across the U.S. in 2024, report shows
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Jury awards $25M to man who sued Oklahoma’s largest newspaper after being mistakenly named in report
- Connecticut remains No.1, while Kansas surges up the USA TODAY Sports men's basketball poll
- Sailor arrives in Hawaii a day after US Coast Guard seeks public’s help finding him
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Family of Black girls handcuffed by Colorado police, held at gunpoint reach $1.9 million settlement
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Values distinguished Christian McCaffrey in high school. And led him to Super Bowl 58
- Maurice Sendak delights children with new book, 12 years after his death
- Whoopi Goldberg counters Jay-Z blasting Beyoncé snubs: 32 Grammys 'not a terrible number!'
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Sailor missing more than 2 weeks arrives in Hawaii, Coast Guard says
- Patrick Mahomes at Super Bowl Opening Night: I'd play basketball just like Steph Curry
- Jury awards $25M to man who sued Oklahoma’s largest newspaper after being mistakenly named in report
Recommendation
DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
Rapper Killer Mike Breaks His Silence on Arrest at 2024 Grammy Awards
Who might Trump pick to be vice president? Here are 6 possibilities
Roger Goodell pushes back on claims NFL scripted Super Bowl 58 for Taylor Swift sideshow
Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
Carl Weathers was more than 'Rocky.' He was an NFL player − and a science fiction star.
Viral video of Tesla driver wearing Apple Vision Pro headset raises safety concerns
'Cozy cardio': What to know about the online fitness trend that's meant to be stress-free