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Featured researches published by Samuel A. Mehr.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Two Randomized Trials Provide No Consistent Evidence for Nonmusical Cognitive Benefits of Brief Preschool Music Enrichment

Samuel A. Mehr; Adena Schachner; Rachel C. Katz; Elizabeth S. Spelke

Young children regularly engage in musical activities, but the effects of early music education on childrens cognitive development are unknown. While some studies have found associations between musical training in childhood and later nonmusical cognitive outcomes, few randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have been employed to assess causal effects of music lessons on child cognition and no clear pattern of results has emerged. We conducted two RCTs with preschool children investigating the cognitive effects of a brief series of music classes, as compared to a similar but non-musical form of arts instruction (visual arts classes, Experiment 1) or to a no-treatment control (Experiment 2). Consistent with typical preschool arts enrichment programs, parents attended classes with their children, participating in a variety of developmentally appropriate arts activities. After six weeks of class, we assessed childrens skills in four distinct cognitive areas in which older arts-trained students have been reported to excel: spatial-navigational reasoning, visual form analysis, numerical discrimination, and receptive vocabulary. We initially found that children from the music class showed greater spatial-navigational ability than did children from the visual arts class, while children from the visual arts class showed greater visual form analysis ability than children from the music class (Experiment 1). However, a partial replication attempt comparing music training to a no-treatment control failed to confirm these findings (Experiment 2), and the combined results of the two experiments were negative: overall, children provided with music classes performed no better than those with visual arts or no classes on any assessment. Our findings underscore the need for replication in RCTs, and suggest caution in interpreting the positive findings from past studies of cognitive effects of music instruction.


Journal of Research in Music Education | 2014

Music in the Home: New Evidence for an Intergenerational Link.

Samuel A. Mehr

This study had three goals: (1) to investigate the potential connection between music experiences in early childhood and later music making as a parent, (2) to report the frequency of music making in a sample of American families with young children along with parents’ opinions on possible benefits of music classes, and (3) to compare frequency data to two previous studies. Parents of 4-year-old children were surveyed on the frequency of music activities in the home, their early arts experiences, and a variety of topics concerning arts education. An intergenerational link was found: The frequency of parental song in childhood significantly predicted parents’ later music behaviors with their own children, adjusting for other aspects of the early artistic environment. Parents reported high frequencies of music activities in the home, with most parents singing or playing recorded music to their children on a daily basis. Notably, the frequency of parental music making was unrelated to family income or to participation in music classes. Parents’ opinions on the effects of music education reflected a widespread belief that music classes confer a variety of nonmusical benefits.


Psychological Science | 2016

For 5-Month-Old Infants, Melodies Are Social

Samuel A. Mehr; Lee Ann Song; Elizabeth S. Spelke

For 1 to 2 weeks, 5-month-old infants listened at home to one of two novel songs with identical lyrics and rhythms, but different melodies; the song was sung by a parent, emanated from a toy, or was sung live by a friendly but unfamiliar adult first in person and subsequently via interactive video. We then tested the infants’ selective attention to two novel individuals after one sang the familiar song and the other sang the unfamiliar song. Infants who had experienced a parent singing looked longer at the new person who had sung the familiar melody than at the new person who had sung the unfamiliar melody, and the amount of song exposure at home predicted the size of that preference. Neither effect was observed, however, among infants who had heard the song emanating from a toy or being sung by a socially unrelated person, despite these infants’ remarkable memory for the familiar melody, tested an average of more than 8 months later. These findings suggest that melodies produced live and experienced at home by known social partners carry social meaning for infants.


Psychological Science | 2017

Genomic imprinting is implicated in the psychology of music

Samuel A. Mehr; Jennifer Kotler; Rhea M. Howard; David Haig; Max M. Krasnow

Why do people sing to babies? Human infants are relatively altricial and need their parents’ attention to survive. Infant-directed song may constitute a signal of that attention. In Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS), a rare disorder of genomic imprinting, genes from chromosome 15q11–q13 that are typically paternally expressed are unexpressed, which results in exaggeration of traits that reduce offspring’s investment demands on the mother. PWS may thus be associated with a distinctive musical phenotype. We report unusual responses to music in people with PWS. Subjects with PWS (N = 39) moved more during music listening, exhibited greater reductions in heart rate in response to music listening, and displayed a specific deficit in pitch-discrimination ability relative to typically developing adults and children (N = 589). Paternally expressed genes from 15q11–q13, which are unexpressed in PWS, may thus increase demands for music and enhance perceptual sensitivity to music. These results implicate genomic imprinting in the psychology of music, informing theories of music’s evolutionary history.


Evolution and Human Behavior | 2017

Parent-offspring conflict and the evolution of infant-directed song

Samuel A. Mehr; Max M. Krasnow


Frontiers in Psychology | 2015

Miscommunication of science: music cognition research in the popular press

Samuel A. Mehr


Developmental Science | 2018

Shared musical knowledge in 11-month-old infants

Samuel A. Mehr; Elizabeth S. Spelke


Current Biology | 2018

Form and function in human song

Samuel A. Mehr; Manvir Singh; Hunter York; Luke Glowacki; Max M. Krasnow


PLOS ONE | 2018

Sight-over-sound judgments of music performances are replicable effects with limited interpretability

Samuel A. Mehr; Daniel A. Scannell; Ellen Winner


Journal of Vision | 2017

Children can predict actions from subtle preparatory movements, but not as well as adults

Maryam Vaziri-Pashkam; Daniel Kim; Samuel A. Mehr; Ken Nakayama; Elizabeth S. Spelke

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