Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Sensitive period" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Using cortico-cerebellar structural patterns to classify early- and late-trained musicians Shenker JJ; Steele CJ; Zatorre RJ; Penhune VB; 37326147
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Early musical training shapes cortico-cerebellar structural covariation Shenker JJ; Steele CJ; Chakravarty MM; Zatorre RJ; Penhune VB; 34657166
PSYCHOLOGY
3 What you learn & when you learn it: Impact of early bilingual & music experience on the structural characteristics of auditory-motor pathways Vaquero L; Rousseau PN; Vozian D; Klein D; Penhune V; 32119984
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Early exposure to parental bipolar disorder and risk of mood disorder: the Flourish Canadian prospective offspring cohort study. Goodday S, Levy A, Flowerdew G, Horrocks J, Grof P, Ellenbogen M, Duffy A 26486425
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Using cortico-cerebellar structural patterns to classify early- and late-trained musicians
Authors:Shenker JJSteele CJZatorre RJPenhune VB
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37326147/
DOI:10.1002/hbm.26395
Publication:Human brain mapping
Keywords:experiencemusicplasticitysensitive periodsupport vector machine
PMID:37326147 Category: Date Added:2023-06-16
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY

Description:

A body of current evidence suggests that there is a sensitive period for musical training: people who begin training before the age of seven show better performance on tests of musical skill, and also show differences in brain structure-especially in motor cortical and cerebellar regions-compared with those who start later. We used support vector machine models-a subtype of supervised machine learning-to investigate distributed patterns of structural differences between early-trained (ET) and late-trained (LT) musicians and to better understand the age boundaries of the sensitive period for early musicianship. After selecting regions of interest from the cerebellum and cortical sensorimotor regions, we applied recursive feature elimination with cross-validation to produce a model which optimally and accurately classified ET and LT musicians. This model identified a combination of 17 regions, including 9 cerebellar and 8 sensorimotor regions, and maintained a high accuracy and sensitivity (true positives, i.e., ET musicians) without sacrificing specificity (true negatives, i.e., LT musicians). Critically, this model-which defined ET musicians as those who began their training before the age of 7-outperformed all other models in which age of start was earlier or later (between ages 5-10). Our model's ability to accurately classify ET and LT musicians provides additional evidence that musical training before age 7 affects cortico-cerebellar structure in adulthood, and is consistent with the hypothesis that connected brain regions interact during development to reciprocally influence brain and behavioral maturation.





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