Turns Out Our Listening Habits Might Be Doing More Than Pleasing Our Ears…


I just came across a Monash University led study that I thought this community would appreciate, especially those of us who’ve racked up hundreds (…or thousands 😅) of hours spinning records, streaming playlists, and noodling on instruments over the years.

Researchers looked at 10,800+ adults aged 70+ and found some pretty striking correlations:

  • Regular music listening (“always”) = 39% lower risk of dementia
    (compared to folks who “never/rarely/sometimes” listen)
  • Playing an instrument = 35% lower dementia risk
  • Music listening also linked to a 17% lower rate of cognitive impairment and better overall cognition + episodic memory
  • Doing both listening + playing? 33% decreased dementia risk + 22% lower cognitive impairment.

The data came from the ASPREE and ALSOP studies, and while it can’t prove causation, the researchers point out that cognitive aging isn’t just genetics, lifestyle matters just as much. And it turns out music might be one of the most accessible, enjoyable “interventions” we have.

Professor Joanne Ryan summed it up nicely: as lifespans get longer, preventing or delaying dementia becomes critical and habits like listening to or playing music may support healthier brain aging.

So yeah…

All those hours we’ve spent chasing better sound, tweaking gear, and playing music might actually be doing our brains a favor.

Not a bad justification for the next upgrade either. 😉

Do you feel your listening sessions are mentally stimulating or “therapeutic”? Anyone here notice differences in focus, memory, or mood depending on how much you listen or play?

Happy listening and apparently, healthy listening too. 🎶🧠

lalitk

I wonder how the breakdown occurs by genre, or breadth of taste.  I know people who listen to music regularly but it might be the same twenty albums.  Does that stretch the neurons after 50 years of repetition, to the same extent that people who constantly are seeking out unfamiliar music?  

I wonder how the breakdown occurs by genre, or breadth of taste.  I know people who listen to music regularly but it might be the same twenty albums.  Does that stretch the neurons after 50 years of repetition, to the same extent that people who constantly are seeking out unfamiliar music?  

@mahler123 

If listening to the same music repeatedly doesn’t have the same beneficial results they would be more prone to develop dementia, and then at some point they won’t recall their familiar music and it will be as if they listen to new music constantly, so I imagine in time they will catch up. 

As long as they recall how to play the music. 

Half of my time is listening again sometimes for 60 years straight the same music...

half of my time is discovering new music not only from jazz and classical but from non Western music....

 Listening the same albums only is obsession&nostalgia , or only listening new albums  is distraction and consumerism of commercial music ...

 

 We cannot listen Bach "art of the fugue" with one listening or three in the same interpretative circumstances ...it must be repeated regularly ...

 

We cannot discover sitar music as a curiosity and coming back to "pop" forgetting sitar...Sitar,veena,sarangi, tanbur, ud, etc ask for regular listening sessions...

Listening music is the art of attention but also of concentration...

 

it is the same with poetry reading by the way ....

 

As for music ideally we must play and listen, in poetry case we must write and read poetry, regularly ....( i dont play a musical instrument alas! but i wrote and read poetry in French ) 

 

if you dont like poetry, mathematics and music, at least two of them  forget thinking....

Music do well for health but do  way more for thinking if we listen to understand not only to sleep ...

@gents roger lol - always wanna check on fellow AGer's mental health haha.  Your joke is now received

@mahgister 100% agreed - deep diving music takes multiple repeated sessions otherwise you may miss the overall feel.   One of my favorite bands, The Flower Kings, is one of these where you must listen multiple times to really get the full feel of the music.  It's about more than a moment but how the composition tells a story and takes your emotions for a ride.  Without proper attention and regular listening, most of the intent of the music can be lost.  Highly recommend The Flower Kings btw for anyone that likes prog.  Retropolis is a great album to start with