Auditory and visual category learning in musicians and nonmusicians.

J Exp Psychol Gen

Communication Science and Disorders.

Published: March 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Across three experiments, researchers examined how amateur musicians and nonmusicians learn auditory and visual categories categorized as rule-based (RB) or information-integration (II), noting that RB categories are learned through reflective reasoning and II categories through reflexive processing.
  • Musicians showed a specific advantage in learning auditory RB categories, especially when they received instructions about the defining dimensions, but did not show differences in learning auditory II categories, or visual categories of either type.
  • The findings suggest that musicians have a limited category learning advantage that is dependent on their musical expertise, instruction on dimensions, and the nature of the categories being learned, rather than a general advantage across all forms of categorization.

Article Abstract

Across three experiments, we compare the ability of amateur musicians and nonmusicians in learning artificial auditory and visual categories that can be described as either rule-based (RB) or information-integration (II) category structures. RB categories are optimally learned using a reflective reasoning process, whereas II categories are optimally learned by integrating information from two stimulus dimensions at a reflexive, predecisional processing stage. We found that musicians have selective advantages for learning auditory RB categories, specifically when they are instructed about the dimensions that define the categories. In Experiment 1, musicians enrolled in a music college demonstrated advantages over nonmusicians in learning auditory RB categories defined on frequency and duration dimensions but did not demonstrate differences in learning auditory II categories or either visual RB or II categories. In Experiment 2, a broader online sample of musicians who were not instructed about the dimensions did not demonstrate any advantage in auditory or visual learning. In Experiment 3, an online sample of musicians when given dimension instructions demonstrated early advantages over nonmusicians for auditory RB but not visual RB categories. Musicians do not demonstrate a global categorization advantage. Musicians' category learning advantage is limited to their modality of expertise, is enhanced with dimension instructions, and is specific to categories that can be described with verbalizable rules. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8807758PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xge0001088DOI Listing

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