The popular view that music enhances creativity has been challenged by researchers who say it has the opposite effect.
Psychologists from the University of Central Lancashire, University of
Gävle in Sweden and Lancaster University investigated the impact of background
music on performance by presenting people with verbal insight problems that are
believed to tap creativity.
They found that background music “significantly impaired” people’s ability
to complete tasks testing verbal creativity – but there was no effect for
background library noise.
For example, a participant was shown three words (e.g., dress, dial,
flower), with the requirement being to find a single associated word (in this
case “sun”) that can be combined to make a common word or phrase (i.e.,
sundress, sundial and sunflower).
The researchers used three experiments involving verbal tasks in either a
quiet environment or while exposed to:
- Background
music with foreign (unfamiliar) lyrics
- Instrumental
music without lyrics
- Music with
familiar lyrics
Dr Neil McLatchie of Lancaster University said: “We found strong evidence
of impaired performance when playing background music in comparison to quiet
background conditions.”
Researchers suggest this may be because music disrupts verbal working
memory.
The third experiment – exposure to music with familiar lyrics- impaired
creativity regardless of whether the music also boosted mood, induced a
positive mood, was liked by the participants, or whether participants typically
studied in the presence of music.
However, there was no significant difference in performance of the verbal
tasks between the quiet and library noise conditions.
Researchers say this is because library noise is a “steady state”
environment which is not as disruptive.
“To conclude, the findings here challenge the popular view that music
enhances creativity, and instead demonstrate that music, regardless of the
presence of semantic content (no lyrics, familiar lyrics or unfamiliar lyrics),
consistently disrupts creative performance in insight problem solving.”
Journal article:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/acp.3532
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/acp.3532
Source:
https://www.lancaster.ac.uk/
https://www.lancaster.ac.uk/
No comments:
Post a Comment