A Nonmusician With Severe Alzheimer's Dementia Learns a New Song
Journal
Neurocase
Year
2017
Abstract
The hallmark symptom of Alzheimer's Dementia (AD) is impaired memory, but memory for familiar music can be preserved. We explored whether a non-musician with severe AD could learn a new song. A 91 year old woman (NC) with severe AD was taught an unfamiliar song. We assessed her delayed song recall (24 hours and 2 weeks), music cognition, two word recall (presented within a familiar song lyric, a famous proverb, or as a word stem completion task), and lyrics and proverb completion. NC's music cognition (pitch and rhythm perception, recognition of familiar music, completion of lyrics) was relatively preserved. She recalled 0/2 words presented in song lyrics or proverbs, but 2/2 word stems, suggesting intact implicit memory function. She could sing along to the newly learnt song on immediate and delayed recall (24 hours and 2 weeks later), and with intermittent prompting could sing it alone. This is the first detailed study of preserved ability to learn a new song in a non-musician with severe AD, and contributes to observations of relatively preserved musical abilities in people with dementia.
Music and Health Institute Terms
Alzheimer's and Related Dementias; Cognitive Abilities; Elderly; Memory; Music Listening; Neurodegenerative Disorders; Recreative Music Methods; Singing a song; Song Reminiscence
Indexed Terms
Elderly; Alzheimer Disease; Auditory Perception; Learning Disabilities; Mental Recall; Neuropsychological Tests; Singing; Vocabulary; Alzheimer’s Dementia; memory; singing
Study Type
Case Study; Qualitative Methods
PubMed ID
28376689
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Baird, A., Umbach, H., & Thompson, W. F. (2017). A Nonmusician With Severe Alzheimer's Dementia Learns a New Song. Neurocase, 23 (1), 36-40. Retrieved from https://remix.berklee.edu/mhi-citations/228