Keeping Mozart In Mind:
Shaw Book Sets the Record Straight on the Mozart Effect
and Related Research
Keeping Mozart in Mind, a new landmark book
by Dr. Gordon Shaw released in September 1999, presents
the latest scientific findings on the effects of music
on reasoning and learning, and the real story behind
the "Mozart effect" research.
Dr. Shaw, world-renowned for his leadership in the
music and the brain studies and discoverer of the "Mozart
effect," starts with the theme "music as a
window into higher brain function." Building from
that, he shows how music can help us understand how
the brain works and how music may enhance how we think,
reason, and create.
This interdisciplinary book represents over 25 years
of Dr. Shaws music/brain research and includes
key information from his original research and that
of other scientists around the world. Offering the only
comprehensive overview of the relevant scientific research,
Keeping Mozart in Mind is written in a style
that makes this information accessible to not only researchers
and clinicians, but also educators and parents.
Keeping Mozart in Mind is divided into five
distinct topics. Part I gives the essential ideas of
Dr. Shaws theme that music can enhance our ability
to think and reason. He supports this theme with history,
anecdotes, and interviews as well as introducing key
ideas and experiments. Part II contains the more technical
aspects of how music enhances learning. Made readable
and accessible to everyone, Keeping Mozart in Mind
contains a complete glossary, notes and a brief guide
at the beginning of each chapter to outline the important
points and objectives. Part III contains all the details
of the dramatic behavior experiments that were performed
with humans involving music. Part IV presents the results
and proposed studies that are crucial to the detailed
scientific understanding of what is happening in the
brain. Part V presents the future of music as an influence
upon higher brain function. Included in this section
is a look at education along with Dr. Shaws conclusion
on how music might enhance child brain development.
Keeping Mozart in Mind includes key information
about scientific research studies that have shown some
remarkable results, including:
- In March 1999, Neurological Research published
the latest study headed by Shaw, reporting that second
graders who played the piano and the S.T.A.R.™
interactive game developed by Matthew Peterson saw
their scores rise 27 percent on proportional math
and fractions tests.
- In February 1997, a study from Dr. Shaws laboratory,
published in Neurological Research, announced
that six months of piano keyboard training caused
enhancement of spatial-temporal reasoning in preschool
children: they scored 34% higher on puzzle-solving
tests.
- In October 1993, Dr. Shaw and Dr. Frances Rauscher
published an article in Nature. It announced
that a study done with college students showed that
listening to the Mozart Sonata for Two Pianos in D
Major, (K. 448) caused a subsequent enhancement in
reasoning. This "Mozart effect," as coined
by the media, created worldwide interest. It quickly
became part of the popular folklore that was referred
to in comic strips, advertisements, music CDs, and
more.
- Excerpt from the Preface: This book is our story
of higher brain function: how humans think, reason,
and create. It is based on a structured model of the
brain that Xiaodan Leng and I proposed in 1991; it
demonstrates how music is a window into higher brain
function. This book is not about music, but about
how music can help us understand how the brain works
and how music can enhance how we think, reason, and
create. We are at the very beginning of this quest:
much additional research remains to be done. However,
I believe that we have made considerable progress
and that all the pieces of the story presented here
fit into a coherent and compelling picture.
Excerpt from the Prologue: The ideas presented in
this book cross many boundaries, including brain theory,
neurophysiology, child development, music cognition,
education, teaching of music, teaching of math and science,
neuropathology, psychology, and the evolution of the
brain. But why should I write this book now when we
are at the very early and controversial stages of this
quest to understand how we think and reason by using
music as a window into higher brain function? The reason
is that I believe this book brings together the diverse
experimental data and theory that support this model.
Let me present it as a substantial number of pieces
in a puzzle: Looking at each piece of the puzzle, a
careful thinker would have many questions and doubts
about the results from any individual piece. Furthermore,
the pieces are not big enough to make the final result
obvious. However, by carefully examining each piece
and the relationship among the pieces, I believe it
becomes extremely likely that we are on the right track.
In fact, I hope that this book will serve as the necessary
guide in completing the puzzle of higher brain function.
The book is accompanied by a CD-ROM that includes the
first movement of Mozarts Sonata for Two Pianos
in D Major, (K. 448), performed by Murray Perahia and
Radu Lupu, courtesy of Sony Classical™, and a
special descriptive version of S.T.A.R. (Spatial-Temporal
Animation Reasoning), an interactive software program
developed by Matthew Peterson, that was used in combination
with piano lessons in a recent study where elementary
age children showed significant improvement in the ability
to learn difficult math concepts.
Dr. Gordon Shaw is a professor emeritus in the Department
of Physics at the University of California, Irvine and
president of the Music Intelligence Neural Development
Institute, Irvine. For more information, visit the Institutes
web site at www.MINDinst.org.
Keeping Mozart in Mind is available in bookstores
and through www.amazon.com,
www.academicpress.com
or www.barnesandnoble.com.