Focusing on More Than One Interest Improves Your Brain

Those who study music have known this for years. The discipline and dexterity required to learn a music instrument to intermediate to advanced ability affects the brain such that the performer builds skills useful in areas other than music performance. Fortune Magazine says there’s more evidence that cross-training makes you better at everything you do, while focusing on one basic skill set does not expand your brain.

It’s odd to find an article about cognitive neuroscience in a financial magazine, but the theories of cross-training are applicable to entrepreneurs or anyone who wants to build personal excellence. The Fortune article contains a few examples to illustrate the benefits of satisfying interests in seemingly unrelated activities.

Scroll down to read 6 comments on “Focusing on More Than One Interest Improves Your Brain.”

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6 Comments on “Focusing on More Than One Interest Improves Your Brain.” To add your own comment, scroll down.

  1. #1: G.
    Thursday, October 26, 2006
    8:13 pm (reply)

    The brain is brilliant. If you eat food with the opposite hand it takes different because you taste it with different parts of your tongue.

  2. #2: Flexo
    Thursday, October 26, 2006
    11:49 pm (reply)

    I’m always fascinated when I learn new things about the way the brain operates.

  3. #3: finance girl
    Friday, October 27, 2006
    1:13 am (reply)

    couldn’t agree more! in addition to the PF stuff I also have French as an interest (I have a weekly tutor)

  4. #4: Ralph Morgan
    Saturday, October 28, 2006
    12:29 am (reply)

    Really? How did they do a controlled experiment? Randomly select 100 people and make half learn the piano, and see if this group performed better at other tasks than the control group???

    If it’s just a study of the average ability of those who cross-train, then it can’t tell whether those who cross-train get better at other things due to the training, or whether having better skills/ability to start with means that you’re more likely to cross-train or have lots of interests.

    Regards
    http://enoughwealth.blogspot.com

  5. #5: Flexo
    Saturday, October 28, 2006
    10:46 am (reply)

    There are a number of studies that show the positive cognitive effects of music lessons, and they are controlled studies.

    Here are some sources:

    1 2 3 4

    Those four links reference four separate studies and I’m sure I can find at least 20 more if I had the time. In fact, the link between music lessons and its effects in the brain has been studied to death. If you like, you can research each of the studies and determined which experiments were controlled to your liking.

  6. #6: fivecentnickel.com
    Saturday, October 28, 2006
    12:34 pm (reply)

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