In the first study of its kind, two researchers have used
popular music to help severely brain-injured patients recall personal memories.
Amee Baird and Séverine Samson outline the results and conclusions of their
pioneering research in the recent issue of the journal Neuropsychological
Rehabilitation.
Although
their study covered a small number of cases, it’s the very first to examine
‘music-evoked autobiographical memories’ (MEAMs) in patients with acquired
brain injuries (ABIs), rather than those who are healthy or suffer from
Alzheimer’s Disease.
In
their study, Baird and Samson played extracts from ‘Billboard Hot 100’
number-one songs in random order to five patients. The songs, taken from the
whole of the patient’s lifespan from age five, were also played to five control
subjects with no brain injury. All were asked to record how familiar they
were with a given song, whether they liked it, and what memories it invoked.
Doctors
Baird and Samson found that the frequency of recorded MEAMs was similar for
patients (38%–71%) and controls (48%–71%). Only one of the four ABI patients
recorded no MEAMs. In fact, the highest number of MEAMs in the whole group was
recorded by one of the ABI patients. In all those studied, the majority of
MEAMs were of a person, people or a life period and were typically positive.
Songs that evoked a memory were noted as more familiar and more liked than
those that did not.
As
a potential tool for helping patients regain their memories, Baird and Samson
conclude that: “Music was more efficient at evoking autobiographical memories
than verbal prompts of the Autobiographical Memory Interview (AMI) across each
life period, with a higher percentage of MEAMs for each life period compared
with AMI scores.”
“The
findings suggest that music is an effective stimulus for eliciting autobiographical
memories and may be beneficial in the rehabilitation of autobiographical
amnesia, but only in patients without a fundamental deficit in autobiographical
recall memory and intact pitch perception.”
The
authors hope that their ground-breaking work will encourage others to carry out
further studies on MEAMs in larger ABI populations. They also call for further
studies of both healthy people and those with other neurological conditions to
learn more about the clear relationship between memory, music and emotion; they
hope that one day we might truly “understand the mechanisms underlying the
unique memory enhancing effect of music”.