Music has a universal ability to tap into our
deepest emotions. Unfortunately, for children with
autism spectrum disorders (ASD), understanding
emotions is a very difficult task. Can music help
them?
Thanks to funding from the GRAMMY Foundation Grant
Program, researchers at UCLA are about to find out.
Individuals with ASD have trouble recognizing
emotions, particularly social emotions conveyed
through facial expressions — a frown, a smirk or a
smile. This inability can rob a child of the
chance to communicate and socialize and often leads
to social isolation.
In an innovative study led by Istvan Molnar-Szakacs,
a researcher at the UCLA Tennenbaum Center for the
Biology of Creativity, music will be used as a tool
to explore the ability of children with ASD to
identify emotions in musical excerpts and facial
expressions.
"Music has long been known to touch autistic
children," Molnar-Szakacs said. "Studies from the
early days of autism research have already shown us
that music provokes engagement and interest in kids
with ASD. More recently, such things as musical
memory and pitch abilities in children with ASD have
been found to be as good as or better than in
typically developing children."
In addition, he said, researchers have shown that
because many children with ASD are naturally
interested in music, they respond well to
music-based therapy.
But no one has ever done a study to see if children
with ASD process musical emotions and social
emotions in the same way that typically developing
children do.
In this study, Molnar-Szakacs will use "emotional
music" to examine the brain regions involved in
emotion processing.
"Our hypothesis is that if we are able to engage the
brain region involved in emotion processing using
emotional music, this will open the doorway for
teaching children with ASD to better recognize
emotions in social stimuli, such as facial
expressions."
The overarching goal of the study, of course, is to
gain insights about the causes of autism. Molnar-Szakacs
will use neuroimaging — functional magnetic
resonance imaging, or fMRI — to look at and
compare brain activity in ASD children with brain
activity in typically developing kids while both
groups are engaged in identifying emotions from
faces and musical excerpts.
"The study should help us to better understand how
the brain processes emotion in children with autism;
that, in turn, will help us develop more optimal
interventions," Molnar-Szakacs said. "Importantly,
this study will also help us promote the use of
music as a powerful tool for studying brain
functions, from cognition to creativity."
Approximately 15 children with ASD, ranging in age
from 10 to 13, will participate in the study, which
is being conducted under the auspices of the Help
Group–UCLA Autism Research Alliance. The alliance,
directed by UCLA's Elizabeth Laugeson, is an
innovative partnership between the nonprofit Help
Group, which serves children with special needs
related to autism, and the Semel Institute for
Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA, and is
dedicated to enhancing and expanding ASD research.
The project is also being conducted in collaboration
with Katie Overy, co-director of the Institute for
Music in Human and Social Development at the
University of Edinburgh, Scotland.
"The hope, of course, is that this work will not
only be of scientific value and interest, but most
of all, that it will translate into real-life
improvements in the quality of the children's
lives," Molnar-Szakacs said.