"Charles Limb: Your Brain On
Improv"
Ted Talk - TEDxMidAtlantic
Link:
http://www.ted.com/talks/charles_limb_your_brain_on_improv.html
or
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkRJG510CKo
Dr. Charles Limb is
a surgeon specializing in cochlear implantations, a researcher of the
brain, and a musician. In his Ted Talk (2010), Limb discusses his
research on improvisation and creativity in the brains of jazz and
hip-hip musicians. Beginning his talk with a video of an
improvisation by master jazz pianist Keith Jarrett, Limb then poses
the following problem: How can the brain generate so much musical
information spontaneously? His talk tries to begin to answer this
question by reference to three fMRI studies that examine artistic
creativity on a neurological level. He shows video footage of these
experiments.
1) The first study
Limb describes is called "Neural Substrates of Spontaneous
Musical Performance: A Study of Jazz Improvisation". The
question he aims to answer in this study is: "What happens in
the brain during something that is memorized and over-learned, and
what happens in the brain when something is spontaneously generated
or improvised?". In order to answer this, Limb looks at the
brain activity in professional jazz musicians doing two tasks: 1)
playing a memorized, pre-determined example of music and 2)
improvising on the same chord progression as the memorized piece. He
does this using a 35-key midi keyboard designed to fit in the
scanner, be magnetically safe, and fit on the laps of test-musicians
while they are laying down in the fMRI machine.
The results of this
study show that when the musicians improvise, the lateral prefrontal
cortex (associated with self-monitoring, introspection and working
memory) is "turning off", and that the medial prefrontal
cortex (associated with self-expression) is "turning on".
With these findings, Limb hypothesizes that in order to be creative,
the brain has to shut off the part of the brain that is
self-inhibiting. In other words, creating novel ideas requires that
the musician not censor him/herself or be afraid to make mistakes.
2) In the second
study, Limb examines what happens in the brain when two musicians
interact and react to each other's improvisations. Limb puts a
professional jazz pianist (Mike Pope) in the scanner and another
musician (himself) in the control room. They then "trade fours"
(a musical conversation where musicians trade off improvising every 4
bars and then repeat this over and over within the musical form of a
piece).
The results of this
study show that "trading fours" leads to activation of the
left interior frontal gyrus - the Broca's area - which is thought to
be involved in language and expressive communication. Limb
hypothesizes that perhaps there is a neurological basis for the idea
that music is a language, since his findings show activity in the
language areas of the brain when two musicians are having a "musical
conversation".
3) The third study
that Limb describes repeats the first study. This time he looks at
the brain activity of hip-hop artists instead of jazz artists by
having the hip-hop artist perform two tasks: 1) a pre-written rap
from memory and then 2) a freestyle (improvise a rap) based on a few
select words from that same pre-written rap.
The results he
finds in this study are that the language and visual areas of the
brain light up when free-styling, in contrast to the performance of
the memorized rap. He also finds activation in the cerebellum, which
is associated with motor coordination.
Limb concludes his
talk by asking some questions he hopes will be answered in the
future, now that we have the technology to scientifically study the
brain during creative activities.
What is the
creative genius?
Why does the brain
seek creativity?
How do we acquire
creativity?
What factors
disrupt creativity?
Can creative
behaviour be learned?
Reflection:
Coming from a
performance background in jazz, I find this Ted Talk extremely
fascinating. I think it is very interesting that in Limb's first
study, the part of our brain involved with self-monitoring (lateral
prefrontal cortex) was "turning off" during improvisation.
I am curious to know if this "turning off" can show up on
the fMRI scans in various degrees depending on how engaged the
performer is in the improvisation. I wonder if this is the case
because in past improvisatory situations, I have felt varying degrees
of inhibition - from very self-conscious to completely free and in
the moment. I always felt that the latter state always allowed me to
improvise better or achieve what some call "flow". Could
the "turning off" of the lateral prefrontal cortex be the
neurological explanation of "flow", the state where we are
so absorbed in the moment that we lose track of or feel outside of
ourselves?
Limb's second
study, which found that the language areas of the brain light up when
musicians interact, appears to suggest that the idea of music as a
language has a neurological basis. This comparison makes sense since jazz improvisors often learn musical vocabulary and phrases in order to be
able to create a coherent musical statement or respond to someone
else's statement; this is similar to how we learn spoken language and
the art of conversation too.
Although Limb's
third study seems to mirror that of the first, he doesn't discuss
whether or not the lateral prefrontal cortex's of the hip-hop
musicians were also "turning off" during their
free-styling. Does this occur during any type of improvisation, from
spoken word, to dance etc? Or just in instrumental improvisation?
One final thought I
have is that if improvisation can "turn off" the self-monitoring parts of the brain, allowing us to be more creative, then perhaps improvisation really should be part of our musical education
system. I imagine that training the brain to be in this state of un-inhibition and creation through improvisation, would translate positively in other
areas of learning and life. Could using improvisational exercises in
the school curriculum help foster more creative people and thinkers in general?
2 comments:
regarding <<<, he doesn't discuss whether or not the lateral prefrontal cortex's of the hip-hop musicians were also "turning off" during their free-styling. Does this occur during any type of improvisation, from spoken word, to dance etc? Or just in instrumental improvisation?>>> i had the same question! i am an improvisor - theatre, drama and comedy improvisor and i teach improvisation to all kinds of people - actors, business people, stressed out people and now i'm starting to offer classes to artists to boost their creativity. wish he could have put a couple of comedic improvisors in the mri to see what would happen!
It is interesting and important to me research , but which did not considering the following three issues that are important for jazz pedagogy:
1. For the experiments have been used only high class players rather than create a wide scale of different levels - basic, a bit advanced, very advanced and professional.
2. There is also no results of verbal improvisations themselves keyboardists themselves to compare the brain activity in both cases.
3.If, during the improvisation activated Broca's area, than the reverse must also take place : the activation of the brain during a free conversation should affect other areas related to musical improvisation.
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