Mon 3 Mar 2008

Wynton Marsalis with the Lincoln Jazz Orchestra, De Bijloke, Ghent
Source: Flickr (Creative Commons License)
A pair of Johns Hopkins and government scientists have discovered that when jazz musicians improvise, their brains turn off areas linked to self-censoring and inhibition, and turn on those that let self-expression flow.
This keyboard was specially designed for a study to assess brain activity in jazz musicians during improvisation. Because fMRI uses powerful magnets, the researchers designed the unconventional keyboard with no iron-containing metal parts that the magnets could attract.
The joint research, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI, and musician volunteers from the Johns Hopkins University’s Peabody Institute, sheds light on the creative improvisation that artists and non-artists use in everyday life, the investigators say.
It appears, they conclude, that jazz musicians create their unique improvised riffs by turning off inhibition and turning up creativity.
In a report published Feb. 27 in Public Library of Science (PLoS) ONE, the scientists from the University’s School of Medicine and the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communications Disorders describe their curiosity about the possible neurological underpinnings of the almost trance-like state jazz artists enter during spontaneous improvisation.
“When jazz musicians improvise, they often play with eyes closed in a distinctive, personal style that transcends traditional rules of melody and rhythm,” says Charles J. Limb, M.D., assistant professor in the Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and a trained jazz saxophonist himself. “It’s a remarkable frame of mind,” he adds, “during which, all of a sudden, the musician is generating music that has never been heard, thought, practiced or played before. What comes out is completely spontaneous.”
Though many recent studies have focused on understanding what parts of a person’s brain are active when listening to music, Limb says few have delved into brain activity while music is being spontaneously composed.
Curious about his own “brain on jazz,” he and a colleague, Allen R. Braun, M.D., of NIDCD, devised a plan to view in real time the brain functions of musicians improvising.
For the study, they recruited six trained jazz pianists, three from the Peabody Institute, a music conservatory where Limb holds a joint faculty appointment. Other volunteers learned about the study by word of mouth through the local jazz community.
The researchers designed a special keyboard to allow the pianists to play inside a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine, a brain-scanner that illuminates areas of the brain responding to various stimuli, identifying which areas are active while a person is involved in some mental task, for example.
Because fMRI uses powerful magnets, the researchers designed the unconventional keyboard with no iron-containing metal parts that the magnet could attract. They also used fMRI-compatible headphones that would allow musicians to hear the music they generate while they’re playing it.
Each musician first took part in four different exercises designed to separate out the brain activity involved in playing simple memorized piano pieces and activity while improvising their music. While lying in the fMRI machine with the special keyboard propped on their laps, the pianists all began by playing the C-major scale, a well-memorized order of notes that every beginner learns. With the sound of a metronome playing over the headphones, the musicians were instructed to play the scale, making sure that each volunteer played the same notes with the same timing.
In the second exercise, the pianists were asked to improvise in time with the metronome. They were asked to use quarter notes on the C-major scale, but could play any of these notes that they wanted.
Next, the musicians were asked to play an original blues melody that they all memorized in advance, while a recorded jazz quartet that complemented the tune played in the background. In the last exercise, the musicians were told to improvise their own tunes with the same recorded jazz quartet.
Limb and Braun then analyzed the brain scans. Since the brain areas activated during memorized playing are parts that tend to be active during any kind of piano playing, the researchers subtracted those images from ones taken during improvisation. Left only with brain activity unique to improvisation, the scientists saw strikingly similar patterns, regardless of whether the musicians were doing simple improvisation on the C-major scale or playing more complex tunes with the jazz quartet.
The scientists found that a region of the brain known as the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, a broad portion of the front of the brain that extends to the sides, showed a slowdown in activity during improvisation. This area has been linked to planned actions and self-censoring, such as carefully deciding what words you might say at a job interview. Shutting down this area could lead to lowered inhibitions, Limb suggests.
The researchers also saw increased activity in the medial prefrontal cortex, which sits in the center of the brain’s frontal lobe. This area has been linked with self-expression and activities that convey individuality, such as telling a story about yourself.
“Jazz is often described as being an extremely individualistic art form. You can figure out which jazz musician is playing because one person’s improvisation sounds only like him or her,” says Limb. “What we think is happening is when you’re telling your own musical story, you’re shutting down impulses that might impede the flow of novel ideas.”
Limb notes that this type of brain activity may also be present during other types of improvisational behavior that are integral parts of life for artists and non-artists alike. For example, he notes, people are continually improvising words in conversations and improvising solutions to problems on the spot. “Without this type of creativity, humans wouldn’t have advanced as a species. It’s an integral part of who we are,” Limb says.
He and Braun plan to use similar techniques to see whether the improvisational brain activity they identified matches that in other types of artists, such as poets or visual artists, as well as non-artists asked to improvise.
This research was funded by the Division of Intramural Research, National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health.
For additional information, go to:
http://hopkinsmedicine.org/otolaryngology/limb.html
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/otolaryngology/
http://www.peabody.jhu.edu/
http://www.peabody.jhu.edu/jazz

March 3rd, 2008 at 2:32 pm
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March 5th, 2008 at 12:54 am
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March 6th, 2008 at 4:55 pm
Hi and greetings from a jazz artist,
Great study!
This kind of research is what I think is very must needed in general for people in order to not only rely on the common opinion that the jazz and improvising is just mysticism and a gift…well, musicality is a gift in itself, that we can say. But to back up Your great study, I very much recommend a book about intuition and improvisation called “Free Play” by Stephen Nachmanovitch. Just google the name to find…
very best,
Esa Pietilä
saxophone/improviser/composer
http://www.esapietila.com
http://www.myspace.com/esapietilatrio
March 6th, 2008 at 11:49 pm
Terve Esa!
THank you of your wonderful comment - considering your well-deserved global reputation this is a very valid comment.
Music really does seem to be more than a skill or a pleasure. We do know that playing the piano lights up more areas in the brain than any other activity - with the possible exception of sex.
I would add that in the neurosciences we stand at the beginning of an amazing period of discovery - think of all those little things we can test for -
what does the brain look like when:
bored?
eating chocolate?
seeing fear?
hearing fear?
Do mother’s have a special child section in their brain’s emotional tract?
What does the sight of alcohol do to an alcoholic?
Do touching different surfaces ignite different responses?
Does my brain know my favourite tastes (Food, Smeels, Aesthetics)
What happens when we are asked to picture infinity?
Or a nanosecond?
Finally, if the brain is the score, hte improv is the mind, right?
Hope to see you here in Malmö - please do call me if you’re coming (the number is at http://www.intelegant.org) - we have a wonderful alto saxophonist in our Vineyard Church - Andreas Andersson - who will be THRILLED that you left a comment, but even more thrilled if he knows you might be heading to Copenhagen / Malmö
Hauska tavata!
John
Hauska tavata!
October 9th, 2008 at 5:52 pm
It’s interesting that you refer to the ‘almost trance-like state’ of the improvising musician. I feel that we need to distinguish carefully between several different states of mind that might be relevant. I’d like to quote Sergei Tumat, a Tuvan shaman who trained as a musician before becoming a shaman. “When I shamanise, I’m not here, not in the place where I’m playing dungur (drum), it’s just my material body that’s there: I’m away with the spirits, that’s where my total attention is. If someone touches me, tries to get my attention, there in the yurt, that’s dangerous - it would be like falling a long way. So it’s completely different from playing music to an audience, where you have to be there, to be attentive to what your material body is doing.
October 9th, 2008 at 7:20 pm
Dear Tim,
Thanks for the excellent comment - I think otherworldliness is one of the important issues facing us in the decade of the mind. You know and understand as a social anthropologist and composer It is an entirely different matter to explain a cognitive process that allows us to have a thought, or even imagination, but other states are much more complex; and yes, music is certainly a gateway to a very complex area of brain behaviour. We look forward to significant progress that goes beyond either a Gestaltian defnition or a merely physical explanation of the physiological explanation into something far more surprising and detailed.
October 9th, 2008 at 7:40 pm
To complete Tim’s comment above - Tim plays with Improv group Henry Cow. There are a number of YouTube videos available:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aOkw31ZFCBQ
is fairly representative of their work.
October 11th, 2008 at 5:14 pm
Well John, just on a point of order, Henry Cow is the name of a band that I was in with these guys 30-40 years ago. Three of us got together for an improv gig in NYC and got labelled by the name of the old band. (Henry Cow did improvise, but also played composed music).Interestingly, Fred Frith’s brother, Christopher, works in the Welcome Foundation Brain Imaging Department, and I’ve had some good talks with him about shamanism and the brain. I think there’s a particular point at which shamans, or musicians for that matter, can feel that another person (conceptualised as a spirit) is in control and that they are receiving something from elsewhere and simply allowing it to flow through them. Perhaps what is being censored - in terms of a reduction in certain types of brain activity - are the normal reality check mechanisms, so that the imagination not only seems free but can seem to be autonomous, so that the subject’s experience is being imagined for them as it were.
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February 4th, 2010 at 11:52 pm
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