In
Music, the Brain and Ecstasy: How
Music Captures Our Imagination (1997),
Robert Jourdain briefly discusses how pianist Glenn Gould "practiced
a good deal in his mind",
so much so that by age twenty-seven Gould had "calculated that
he had played the fifth Bach partita roughly five hundred times,
mostly while driving or walking around town" (p. 229). If Gould,
one of the world's legendary concert pianists, often made use of
mental practice away from the piano, it is natural to assume that
mental practice can be an effective tool in learning musical
material. In
this paper I will examine several studies done on mental practicing,
investigating how effective it is in comparison to physical practice.
Let
us begin by setting the conceptual bounds of this research. According
to Clark (2011), mental practice (MP) is the "cognitive
rehearsal of a task in the absence of overt physical movement"
(p. 472). Cognitive
rehearsal, in turn, is a skill that "involves imagery in several
modalities: visual (pianists "see" their hands on the
keyboard), motor/kinesthetic (they "feel" the keyboard and
finger motions), as well as auditory" (Zatorre, 2005, p. 11).
Based on these definitions, one could assume that when Gould was
practicing in his head, he was probably imagining the following: the
written music or his hands on the piano keys (visual); his fingers
playing a piece and the feel of the keys (motor/kinesthetic); and the
sound of the music, including the melody, harmony, rhythm, timbre,
dynamics and other particulars of the piece (auditory imagery).
Jourdain
(1997) describes "musical imagery" as "a sort of
'perception' in the absence of sensation" (p. 164). He says that
imagery "occurs" in the same areas of he brain that process
stimuli, such as the visual cortex for visual imagery and the
auditory cortex for auditory imagery (p. 163). In regard to auditory
imagery, Zatorre (2005) discusses how "neural
activity in auditory cortex can occur in the absence of sound ... and
that this activity likely mediated the phenomenological experience of
imagining music" (p. 9). In other words, many of the same areas
of the brain that are active when Gould actually practiced the piano
were also active when he imagined practicing in his mind.
If
the same areas of the brain are active during mental practice (MP) as
in physical practice (PP), does this mean that MP can be as effective
as PP? One study by Miksza (2005) examined the effectiveness of MP on
the performance skills of high-school trombonists. The results showed
no significant improvement in the participant's overall performance
abilities; however, they did confirm results from previous MP studies
(Coffman 1990; Ross 1985), which found that MP and PP
combined may be as effective as PP alone
(Miksza, 2005 p. 9). This is an interesting finding which suggests
that MP is a valuable mode of learning that would allow musicians to
effectively practice away from their instruments, as well as prevent
over-use injuries. While Miksza's study suggests the
validity of mental practice, it did not result in any significant
evidence to support the idea that MP improves overall performance
skills. Miksza points out that his study did not examine the
"long-term
advantages" of MP. He proposes that musicians "who
focus on developing detailed mental representations for an extended
period of time may have more success using them in performance"
(p. 10).
Another
study by Cahn (2008) looked at undergraduate jazz
students. They were split into MP, PP and combined MP/PP groups. They
were given the task of transposing and performing a melodic pattern
(3175) over a given chord progression. The aim of the study was to
measure the effectiveness of MP when practiced for various
proportions of time (p.
186). Like Miksza, Cahn also found that there was no significant
difference between PP and combined MP/PP groups (p. 187). What is
interesting about this study is that it involved the MP of a
transposed pattern over a chord progression, not just in the MP of a
written piece of music. Cahn states that "since the task may
have been more related to the cognitive task of continuously
'figuring out' what notes to play rather than the motor action of how
to execute them, and since MP has been found to be more effective on
cognitive tasks than motor
tasks (Feltz and Landers, 1983), the non-significant differences
found between PP and MP may be partly attributed to
this contrast between the cognitive and the motor elements of the
task" (Cahn,
2008, p. 187). We can conclude from this study that MP may be a more
effective tool for tasks that require transposition or analysis than
for the practice of physical movements (this seems intuitive).
A
third study by Highben and Palmer (2004)
investigated the effects of auditory and motor imagery in the
practice of unfamiliar pieces by adult professional and college-level
pianists. Four groups were used in this study: 1) A Normal practice
condition where pianists were told to practice and perform a given
piece; 2) A Motor Only practice condition where pianists played the
piano without any auditory feedback, imagining the sound of what they
were playing; 3) An Auditory Only practice condition where pianists
were instructed to hold their hands still while imagining their
fingers moving to a recording of the test-piece; and 4) A Covert
practice condition where pianists were tested on Motor-only and
Auditory-only practice. The results of this study showed that the
Normal practice condition (PP) group was the best at remembering the
pieces they practiced, with the Covert practice condition (MP only)
group faring the worst (p. 63-64). While PP carried out by the Normal
practice condition proved to be most effective, this study did find
that the Auditory-only practice group showed that MP had an impact on
learning. Highben and Palmer (2004) state: "Whereas
previous studies demonstrated the overall efficacy of mental practice
in music performance (Coffman, 1990; Ross, 1985), these findings
suggest specifically that auditory forms of mental practice aid
performers' learning of unfamiliar music" (p.
64).
Of
the studies I
discussed in this essay, Miksza (2005) and Cahn (2008) concluded that
MP in combination with PP is as effective as PP alone. Highben and
Palmer (2004) add that it is specifically auditory mental practice
that is the most effective form of mental practice in learning new
material. While all these studies show that MP alone is not as
effective as PP, they all seem to point to the idea that MP is still
an important skill that should be nurtured in musical education. In
my own training, MP was never discussed as a valid form of practice,
although I have naturally found found myself practicing in my head
when I'm away from the piano. Sometimes I use mental imagery to
imagine a "performance" of a piece I am learning or
composing, and at other times I recall a recording I have heard or
work out improvisational patterns much like was described in Cahn's
study. Although I engage in MP from time to time, I have never used
it in a systematic way. I now wonder how much stronger my musical
imagination could have become if MP was discussed and made use of in
my musical education. I also wonder if MP was made use of more in
mainstream education, if studies might find participants with
stronger mental imagery abilities, and results that rate MP higher in
efficacy.
References
Cahn,
D. (2008). The effects of varying ratios of physical and mental
practice, and task difficulty on performance of a tonal pattern.
Psychology of Music,
36(2), 179–191.
Clark,
T. (2012). Imagining the music: Methods for assessing musical imagery
ability. Psychology of Music,
40(4), 471–493.
Coffman,
D. (1990). Effects of Mental Practice, Physical Practice, and
Knowledge of Results on Piano Performance. Journal of
Research in Music Education,
38(3), 187–196.
Highben,
Z., & Palmer, C. (2004). Effects of Auditory and Motor Mental
Practice in Memorized Piano Performance. Bulletin of the
Council for Research in Music Education,
(159), 58–65.
Hird,
J.S., Landers, D.M., Thomas, J.R. and Horan, J.J. (1991). Physical
Practice is Superior to Mental Practice in Enhancing Cognitive and
Motor Task Performance. Journal of Sport & Exercise
Psychology, 8, 281–93.
Jourdain,
R. (1997). Music, the Brain, and Ecstasy: How Music
Captures Our Imagination.
HarperCollins.
Miksza,
P. (2005). The Effect of Mental Practice on the Performance
Achievement of High
School
Trombonists. Contributions to Music Education, 32(1),
75-93.
Ross,
S. L. (1985). The Effectiveness of Mental Practice in Improving the
Performance of College Trombonists. Journal of Research in Music
Education, 33(4), 221–230. doi:10.2307/3345249
Zatorre,
R. J. (2005). Mental Concerts: Musical Imagery and Auditory Cortex.
Neuron,
47(1),
9–12.
2 comments:
Such an interesting topic, Amanda.
I have heard repeatedly from teachers in masterclass about the importance of mental practice. Fleisher talks about this in nearly every masterclass. Walter Gieseking is said to have used mental practice regularly, Glenn Gould, as well as
Alfred Brendel.
When I was a younger, I had a teacher suggest mental practicing as an integral part of practicing. As a young teenager, I tried but I am not sure how much I got out of it. I was confused as to what I should be doing (just imagining the music? why?). Organizing my mind enough to make it effective seemed elusive.
Now that making musical decisions is not a daunting part of practicing, I use mental practicing much more efficiently, though probably not as often as I should. Freed from the technical constraints, it allows for decision-making, can strengthen musical connections, that can then be followed up with the how-to in the practice session.
I have also heard of mental practicing suggested for memory-work. There are many possibilities, but one is so simply sit and imagine the piece as completely as one can - which is much more difficult in the absence of an instrument. The other option is to get away from the instrument and simply analyze and find connections in the music that will help in playing from memory. In any event, mental practicing is tremendously useful - when applied intelligently and with a specific purpose - as a way to strengthen musical decisions and practice without physical strain.
Interestingly enough I have found that Mental Practice is stimulated by rhythmic PHysical Activities such as riding a bike. Terry Hanson (BMus) classical guitar
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