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INTEGRATING PIANO TECHNIQUE, PHYSIOLOGY, AND MOTOR LEARNING:

STRATEGIES FOR PERFORMING THE CHOPIN ETUDES


by
Tracy D. Lipke-Perry

_____________________
Copyright Tracy D. Lipke-Perry 2008

A Document Submitted to the Faculty of the


SCHOOL OF MUSIC
In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements
For the Degree of
DOCTOR OF MUSICAL ARTS
In the Graduate College
THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA

2008

THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA


GRADUATE COLLEGE
As members of the Document Committee, we certify that we have read the document
prepared by Tracy D. Lipke-Perry entitled, Integrating Piano Technique, Physiology,
and Motor Learning: Strategies for Performing the Chopin Etudes, and recommend that
it be accepted as fulfilling the document requirement for the Degree of Doctor of Musical
Arts.
_______________________________________________________________________

Date: 6/9/08

Paula Fan
_______________________________________________________________________

Date: 6/9/08

Tannis Gibson
_______________________________________________________________________

Date: 6/9/08

Lisa Zdechlik
Final approval and acceptance of this document is contingent upon the candidates
submission of the final copies of the document to the Graduate College.
I hereby certify that I have read this document prepared under my direction and
recommend that it be accepted as fulfilling the document requirement.
________________________________________________ Date: 6/9/08
Document Director: Paula Fan

STATEMENT BY AUTHOR
This document has been submitted in partial fulfillment of requirements for an
advanced degree at the University of Arizona and is deposited in the University Library
to be made available to borrowers under rules of the Library.
Brief quotations from this document are allowable without special permission, provided
that accurate acknowledgment of source is made. Requests for permission for extended
quotation from or reproduction of this manuscript in whole or in part may be granted by
the copyright holder.

SIGNED: Tracy D. Lipke-Perry

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TABLE OF CONTENTS
LIST OF FIGURES.........................................................................................................9
ABSTRACT.................................................................................................................. 11
CHAPTER 1: HISTORICAL CONTEXT OF THE NINETEENTH-CENTURY PIANO
ETUDE: TECHNICAL AND PHILOSOPHICAL DEVELOPMENTS......................... 13
Exercises, Etudes, and Concert Studies...................................................................... 13
The Rise of the Nineteenth-Century Piano Etude ....................................................... 14
The Chopin Etudes .................................................................................................... 15
Piano Technique and Philosophical Changes: The Nineteenth and Twentieth
Centuries ................................................................................................................... 16
CHAPTER 2: CHOPINS TEACHING PHILOSOPHY AND METHODOLOGY....... 21
General Principles: Technique Building.................................................................... 21
Scales and arpeggios.............................................................................................. 21
Exercises ............................................................................................................... 22
Chopin and Psychological Processes Involved in Playing the Piano........................... 23
CHAPTER 3: THE NEUROMUSCULAR SYSTEM, HAND PHYSIOLOGY, AND
PIANO PRACTICE AND PERFORMANCE: AN OVERVIEW OF SELECT
ISSUES......................................................................................................................... 25
The Nature-Nurture Debate ....................................................................................... 25
Skill Training and the Central Nervous System.......................................................... 28
Neural Plasticity .................................................................................................... 29
Motor Cortex ..................................................................................................... 31

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TABLE OF CONTENTS - Continued
Spinal Mechanisms ............................................................................................ 34
Motor Units ....................................................................................................... 35
-Motoneurons .............................................................................................. 37
Hand Physiology ....................................................................................................... 39
Skeletal Muscles and Motor Units.......................................................................... 39
Structural Differences Within Individual Muscle Fibers..................................... 40
Physiology of Movement Control .............................................................................. 41
Speed..................................................................................................................... 41
Exercise Training and Maximal Velocity (Vmax)................................................. 41
Force ..................................................................................................................... 42
Gradation of Force............................................................................................. 43
Force and Efficiency.......................................................................................... 44
Two-joint and multi-joint muscles.................................................................. 44
Bilateral deficit .............................................................................................. 44
The Fingers and Thumb............................................................................................. 45
Finger Independence.............................................................................................. 45
The Thumb ............................................................................................................ 47
Pianists and Hand Physiology.................................................................................... 49
CHAPTER 4: SKILL ACQUISITON: SENSORIMOTOR LEARNING ..................... 51
Feedback ................................................................................................................... 51
Stages of Learning, Specificity of Practice, and Feedback...................................... 52

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TABLE OF CONTENTS - Continued
Auditory Feedback ................................................................................................ 53
Visual Feedback .................................................................................................... 55
Multi-Sensory Integration.......................................................................................... 56
Audio-Motor Coupling .......................................................................................... 57
Mirror Neurons...................................................................................................... 61
Music and Mental Rehearsal...................................................................................... 67
Motor Imagery....................................................................................................... 68
Visual Imagery ...................................................................................................... 70
Musical Imagery.................................................................................................... 71
Imagery, Performance, and Brain Activity................................................................. 76
Attention ................................................................................................................... 77
Motor Learning and the Human Hand........................................................................ 82
Handedness and Facility of the Non-Dominant Hand............................................. 82
Bi-manual Coordination......................................................................................... 84
Modes of Interlimb Coordination ....................................................................... 85
Finger Tapping and Polyrhythms ....................................................................... 88
Bi-manual Transfer ............................................................................................ 90
Musical Skills and Acquisition of New Coordination Patterns............................ 94
CHAPTER 5: THE CHOPIN ETUDES AND SKILL ACQUISITION......................... 98
Force Gradation: Chopin Etudes Op. 10, Nos. 3, 6, and 11; Op. 25, No. 3; and
KK II b/3 Nr. 2 .......................................................................................................... 98

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TABLE OF CONTENTS - Continued
Etude Op. 10, No. 3 ............................................................................................. 102
Finger Independence: Chopin Etudes Op. 10, Nos. 2, 4, 8 and 12 ........................... 104
Etude Op. 10, No. 8 ............................................................................................. 106
Left Hand Facility: Chopin Etude Op. 10, No. 12 .................................................... 108
Etude Op. 10, No. 12, mm. 1-2 ............................................................................ 109
Etude Op. 10, No. 12, m. 9................................................................................... 110
The Thumb: Chopin Etude Op. 10, No. 5................................................................. 112
Speed: Chopin Etudes Op. 10, No. 4 and Op. 25, and 12 ......................................... 115
Etude Op. 10, No. 4 ............................................................................................. 115
Etude Op. 25, No. 12 ........................................................................................... 115
Flexibility and Suppleness via Imagery: Etude Op. 25, No. 1................................... 120
Polyrhythms: Drei Etden: KK II b/3, No. 1........................................................... 123
CHAPTER 6: CONCLUSIONS ................................................................................. 126
Strategies for Learning and Teaching....................................................................... 126
Practice and Performance..................................................................................... 126
Aural feedback and aural representations ......................................................... 131
Observational learning ..................................................................................... 132
Scales, piano literature, and the brain ............................................................... 132
Discussion ............................................................................................................... 135
APPENDIX A: HENLE URTEXT EDITION PERMISSION...................................... 137

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TABLE OF CONTENTS - Continued
APPENDIX B: WIENER URTEXT EDITION PERMISSION.................................... 138
REFERENCES............................................................................................................ 139

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LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 1. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 3, mm. 1-4........................................................... 98
Figure 2. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 6, mm. 1-3........................................................... 98
Figure 3. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 11, mm. 1-3......................................................... 99
Figure 4. Chopin Etude, Op. 25, No. 3, mm. 1-3........................................................... 99
Figure 5. Chopin Nouvelles Etudes KK II b/3, No. 2, mm. 1-4...................................... 99
Figure 6. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 3, mm. 5-8......................................................... 102
Figure 7. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 2, mm. 1-2......................................................... 104
Figure 8. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 4, mm. 1-2......................................................... 104
Figure 9. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 8, mm. 1-2......................................................... 105
Figure 10. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 8, mm. 8-13 ..................................................... 106
Figure 11. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 8, mm. 26-29 ................................................... 106
Figure 12. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 12, mm. 1-3 ..................................................... 107
Figure 13. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 12, mm. 10-12 ................................................. 107
Figure 14. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 12, mm. 13-18 ................................................. 108
Figure 15. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 12, mm. 61-66 ................................................. 111
Figure 16. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 12, mm. 19-21 ................................................. 111
Figure 17. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 5, mm. 20-26 ................................................... 112
Figure 18. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 5, mm. 1-7....................................................... 113
Figure 19. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 4, mm. 1-8....................................................... 115
Figure 20. Chopin Etude, Op. 10, No. 4, mm. 24-29 ................................................... 117
Figure 21. Chopin Etude, Op. 25, No. 12, mm. 1-2 ..................................................... 118

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LIST OF FIGURES - Continued
Figure 22. Chopin Etude, Op. 25, No. 1, mm. 1-2....................................................... 120
Figure 23. Chopin Nouvelles Etudes KK II b/3, No. 1, mm. 1-11................................ 123

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ABSTRACT
Chopins twenty-seven tudes are both unique and standard within the genre of
advanced piano literature. Having been composed as the instrument itself was
standardized and on the heels of the didactic studies of the classical period, Chopins
tudes are widely heralded as exemplary pedagogical material for their uniform quality
and comprehensiveness. Nevertheless, despite the vast number of resources devoted to
the topic of how one might approach the tudes and the innumerable endorsements which
tout their incomparable worth, relatively cursory mention is made of their musical value.
From a physiological perspective, what makes Chopins tudes exceptional amongst vast
pedagogical repertory, and how does their musical value impact what pianists learn from
their study?
From a modern perspective, a musical image is both the model and the yardstick
for the measure of technical achievement as one compares performance with his or her
musical image. The Chopin tudes are therefore unique in two ways. First, a pianists
musical image of each of the Chopin tudes initiates an individual process of motor
learning. The musical images, and therefore the goals and the processes, are inherently
different from the vast majority of purely didactic studies and exercises. Secondly, the
genius of Chopin permeates the overall conception of the tudes as he intuitively
employed the human ability to develop motor skills in natural ways which continue to be
understood and supported by ongoing research.
This paper explores the Chopin tudes from a largely physiological and
psychological perspective such that modern studies of mental imagery, skill acquisition,

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and human motor abilities converge and highlight what is readily available in the music
itself.

13
CHAPTER 1
HISTORICAL CONTEXT OF THE NINETEENTH-CENTURY PIANO ETUDE:
TECHNICAL AND PHILOSOPHICAL DEVELOPMENTS
Exercises, Etudes, and Concert Studies
Exercises, tudes, and concert studies are intended to strengthen a particular
aspect of piano technique. Each type of piece uniquely reflects the changes occurring
throughout the course of music history with regard to stylistic characteristics and taste,
the development and evolution of instruments themselves, and the period of time during
which the piece is composed. In his discussion of the Chopin tudes entitled, The
Twenty-Seven Etudes and Their Antecedents, Finlow notes the following distinctions
within the genre of didactic keyboard music:
(i) exercises, in which a didactic objective--the isolation and repetition of a specific
technical formula--is assigned primary attention, any musical or characteristic interest
being incidental; (ii) etudes, wherein musical and didactic functions properly stand in a
complementary and indivisible association; and (iii) concert studies, in which the
didactic element is mostly incidental to the primary characteristic substance (though
the music will invariably involve some particular exploitation and demonstration of
virtuoso technique).1
Because individual tudes typically focus on one aspect of technique, they often
evolve from a single musical germ. As a result, the degree to which musical qualities are
woven into the fabric of the tude is dependent upon the individuality of the composer.

Simon Finlow, The Twenty-Seven Etudes and Their Antecedents, in The


Cambridge Companion to Chopin, ed. Jim Samson (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1992), 53.
1

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The Rise of the Nineteenth-Century Piano Etude
The growing popularity of the piano and the rise of the middle class in the
nineteenth century spurred the demand for piano pedagogues and teaching material
related to the capabilities of the instrument and the demands of contemporary repertoire.
Among the virtuoso studies written in the nineteenth century were those by Felix
Mendelssohn (1809-1847), Robert Schumann (1810-1856), Frdric Chopin (18101849), Franz Liszt (1811-1886), Charles-Valentin Alkan (1813-1888), Adolph von
Henselt (1814-1889), Johannes Brahms (1833-1897), and Camille Saint-Sans (18351921). Only a select few remain a significant part of modern concert repertory, however.
Schumann, Chopin, and Liszt are the three musicians who by their work saved piano
composition from the shallowness into which it was in danger of falling or had already
fallen. . . . In all of these, this impulse [toward seriousness of thought] was lively and
effective, although in Chopin it had less of a controversial tinge than it did in
Schumann, and less of an exhibitionistic attitude than it did in the virtuoso Liszt.2
Schumann, Chopin, and Liszt were all fine pianists, and each extended the scope of the
piano tude by incorporating musical challenges into their studies which were technically
more demanding as well. In some ways, their tudes represented the culmination of a
particular type of tude and more closely exemplified the spirit of the original meaning of
the word. As Ganz noted in his survey of the history of the piano tude, in French the
term tude has been in use since the twelfth century; initially it denoted, as did the

Alfred Einstein, Music in the Romantic Era (New York: W. W. Norton & Co.,
Inc., 1947), 202.
2

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original Latin studium, application or taste, the latter word referring to its critical and
artistic sense of implication.3
The Chopin Etudes
Writing in 1900, Donald Tovey declared, Chopins Etudes stand alone.4
Indeed, by many accounts, Chopins twenty-seven tudes are both unique and standard
within the genre of advanced piano literature. Composed as the instrument itself was
standardized and on the heels of the didactic studies of the classical period, they have
become part of standard teaching literature and performance repertoire. As noted by the
eminent pianist and scholar, Paul Badura-Skoda, . . . these are the Etudes on which the
worlds elite pianists have cut their teeth, so to speak, ever since they were composed a
century and a quarter ago.5
The significance of Chopins contribution to the genre was recognized early on by
both Franz Liszt and Robert Schumann. In his article, Some Piano Studies Arranged
According to Their Technical Aims, published in the Neue Zeitschrift fr Musik in 1836,
Robert Schumann named Chopin as one of five composers who are clearly the most
important writers of tudes, the others being J. S. Bach, Clementi, Cramer, and

Oscar Bloch, Dictionnaire tymologique de la langue franaise (Paris: Les Presses


universitaires de France, 1932), I, 277; quoted in Peter Felix Ganz, The Development of
the Etude for Pianoforte, (Ph. D. diss., Northwestern University, 1960), 8-9.
3

Donald Tovey, Observations on Chopins Etudes, in Essays in Musical


Analysis: Chamber Music (London, 1944), 155-6.
4

Paul Badura-Skoda, preface to Etudes Op. 10, by Frdric Chopin (Vienna:


Wiener Urtext Edition, 1973), vi.
5

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Moscheles.6 In the second half of his article which categorized tudes according to their
technical features, Schumann indicated with an asterisk those tudes which, in addition to
their technical worth, were judged to be poetic as well. Schumann highlighted eleven of
the twelve Op. 10 Chopin tudes with asterisks leaving out only Op. 10, No. 2.7
Despite the vast number of resources devoted to the topic of how one might
approach the Chopin tudes and the innumerable endorsements which tout their technical
worth, the technical and musical value of the tudes often seem to be considered
independent of one another. For example, Finlow states that the Chopin tudes are
matchless in their capacity to train the fingers, while their musical quality clearly
permits or rather demands public performance.8 What has yet to have been
considered are the ways in which musical and technical qualities are intertwined mentally
and physically and the impact that such an arrangement might have on the development
of piano technique.
Piano Technique and Philosophical Changes:
The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
One of the striking aspects of discussion regarding piano technique in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries is the emphasis on not simply the fingers, but the
relationship between the mind and physical execution in technical development and piano
6

Finlow, The Twenty-Seven Etudes, 51-2.

Robert Schumann, Die Pianoforte-Etuden, ihren Zwecken nach geordnet, Neue


Zeitschrift fr Musik 4 (1836): 45-6.
7

Idem, 50.

17
performance. Tobias Matthay is widely remembered for his philosophy regarding the
invisible aspects of playing the piano and for developing the principle of rotation, but
he was also a proponent of the use of imagery. In The Visible and Invisible in Pianoforte
Technique Being a Digest of the Authors Technical Teachings up to Date, he stated that
technique means the power of expressing oneself musically. . . . Technique is rather a
matter of the Mind than of the fingers. . . . To Acquire Technique therefore implies that
you must induce and enforce a particular mental-muscular association and co-operation
for every possible musical effect.9
Matthays view is corroborated by many. English pianist and music educator,
Sidney Harrison, noted that we cannot make a sharp division between technique and
interpretation. As the technique gains in command and confidence, it actually seems to
prompt the imagination to bolder and bolder flights.10 Describing Artur Schnabels
approach to technique, one of his students wrote that it was his constantly expressed
belief that if you knew exactly what you wanted, you would findinvent if necessary
the means to achieve it.11 Leon Fleisher concurs suggesting that, its your musical
ideas that form or decide for you what kind of technique you are going to use. In other

Tobias Matthay, The Visible and Invisible in Pianoforte Technique Being a


Digest of the Authors Technical Teachings up to Date (London: Oxford University
Press, 1932), 3.
9

Sidney Harrison, Piano Technique (London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, Ltd.,
1953), 57.
10

David Goldberger, Artur Schnabels Master Classes, The Piano Teacher 5(4)
(1963): 6.
11

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words, if you are trying to get a certain sound, you just experiment around to find the
movement that will get this sound.12
Another prominent figure and one of the significant pedagogues in the first half of
the twentieth century was Abby Whiteside. Many of her views are described in The
Indispensables of Piano Playing published in 1955 and Mastering the Chopin Etudes and
Other Essays published posthumously in 1969.13 Most significantly for the topic at hand,
the principles and methodology that were the foundation of her teaching can now be
understood and substantiated with the most recent scientific advances of the twenty-first
century.
While advocating a holistic approach to piano technique, Whiteside suggested that
the impetus for pianistic development and performance lies in imagery and the power of
the mind. It is only when the emotional response to the aural image of the music creates
in the performers body a physical response, a basic rhythm, as a counterpart to the
rhythmic flow in a composition, that he is enabled to realize to the fullest extent the
beauty inherent in the music.14 Likewise, Whiteside encouraged mental rehearsal and
imagery as part of a pianists daily routine and wrote the following. Just never take it
for granted that the fingers have given up. Instead, set up a daily dozen of thinking
Leon Fleisher, About Practicing and Making Music, Clavier 2(4) (1963): 12.

12

See A. Whiteside, Indispensables of Piano Playing (New York: Coleman-Ross


Co., 1955) and Ibid., Mastering the Chopin Etudes, ed. Joseph Prostakoff and Sophia
Rosoff (New York: Charles Scribners Sons, 1969).
13

Joseph Prostakoff and Sophia Rosoff, foreword to Mastering the Chopin Etudes
and Other Essays, by Abby Whiteside (New York: Charles Scribners Sons, 1969), 4.
14

19
patterns before the hands are allowed on the keyboard.15 Whiteside further noted the
importance of imagery and emotional involvement in practice, not just performance.
Two of her students, Joseph Prostakoff and Sophia Rosoff, recalled the following:
She constantly stressed the necessity of being emotionally involved in practicing a
performance. Early in her career she learned that the human body is so constituted that
the physical coordination used when one is emotionally involved in a performance is
different from the one operating when one is not. This, incidentally, is the reason why
the knowledge of which bones are moved by which muscles is, by itself, of
comparatively little value to the pianist or teacher. Because she was searching for the
basis of a beautiful performance, it was clear to her that an automatic, uninvolved
performanceunfortunately, a commonplace state for the musician practicing
exercises--is not merely negative, it is an actively harmful experience. An essential
element of a superlative performance is systematically ignored, avoided. The ultimate
result of automatic, uninspired practicing can only be an automatic, uninspired
performance.16
It would come as no surprise therefore, that Whiteside was not a particular
proponent of scales or Hanon and Czerny exercises. Regarding the latter, Whiteside
wrote the following.
Czerny has been responsible for untold boredom, and that is exactly why his exercises
should be discarded. Creativeness in ideas is fostered by response to beauty, not to
boredom. It is time we learned to use beautiful music for achieving results if we are
interested in producing beautiful playing. Hanon is used for developing independent
fingers with equal hitting power. Obviously this cannot be accomplished. Each finger
may gain more power, but there will still be inequality in the fingers. Fingers need to
be expert only in transmitting the power of the arm. That is a different and far simpler
problem, which does not demand mechanical and uninteresting patterns.17

Whiteside, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 38.

15

Prostakoff and Rosoff, foreword, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 20.

16

Whiteside, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 177-8.

17

20
Not only did Whiteside espouse the virtues of imagery in performance, but imagery
was central to her approach to teaching as well.
Even then she believed that imagery was much more important in transferring the
desired coordination to the student than a prosaic listing of the various factors of this
coordination. Above all, she was always a teacher and was as much concerned with
the means for communicating an analysis to a pupil as with the analysis itself. For
example, in the early Thirties she had read and very much approved of Otto Ortmanns
book, The Physiological Mechanics of Piano Technique.18 Commenting many years
later, almost at the end of her career, she said, I am still convinced that his analysis of
what happens when one plays well is accurate. My question is, how would he teach
it?19
In addition to her insistence on the importance of imagery, another of Whitesides
significant tenets as a pianist and pedagogue was her unwavering belief in the value of
the Chopin tudes.
Each Etude brings into relief a special balance in activity. One can say, here are the
ingredients. For this or that Etude add a bit more of this or that action. In these
Etudes there is a completely fascinating handling of the various problems of a skilled
coordination. There is no other set of Etudes which so comprehensively presents
every necessary aspect of virtuosity, always combined with musical beauty.20
Whitesides insight into the mental components of pianistic development and
performance and her views regarding the Chopin tudes combined with recent
developments in physiology and motor learning set the stage for enhancing our
understanding of how pianists approach practice, performance, and pedagogy.

O. Ortmann, The Physiological Mechanics of Piano Technique (New York: E.P.


Dutton & Co., 1929).
18

Prostakoff and Rosoff, foreword, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 8.

19

Whiteside, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 43-4.

20

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CHAPTER 2
CHOPINS TEACHING PHILOSOPHY AND METHODOLGY
Chopin was an influential pedagogue despite contributing very few words on the
subject of pedagogy. Of particular interest are the annotated scores of his pupils,
exercises he wrote for his niece, sketches of a method book, his compositions, and the
reminiscences of several of his students.
General Principles: Technique Building
Scales and Arpeggios
For Chopin, The development of technical skill was not an end in itself, but
merely a means of freeing the hands for musical expression.21 He [Chopin]
recommended daily work on scales and arpeggios played with regularity [presumably of
rhythm], and set great store by scales lightly accented in groups of three or four, or even
played three against four and vice versa.22
Now Chopin, from the very first lesson, insisted upon the hands retention of its
position [fingers fall freely and lightly; hand held as though suspended in the air]; . . .
the hand still retaining its horizontal position; the hand was thus prepared for the more
difficult scales, and for arpeggio passages, in which the wide intervals were eventually
reached without effort and without greatly raising the fingers.23

Jeanne Holland, Chopin the Teacher, Journal of the American Liszt Society 17
(1985): 42.
21

Maria von Grewingk, Eine Tochter Alt-Rigas, Schlerin Chopins (Riga: Lffler,
1928), 20.
22

Jean Kleczynski, How to Play Chopin. The Works of Frederic Chopin, Their
Proper Interpretation, trans. Alfred Whittingham (London: William Reeves, 1913), 2932.
23

22
Due to the ease of placing longer fingers on the black keys, Chopin approached scales
beginning with B, F-sharp, and D-flat whereas C major was taught last.24 It is useless to
start learning scales on the piano with C major, the easiest to read, and the most difficult
for the hand, as it has no pivot. Begin with one that places the hand at ease, with the
longer fingers on the black keys, like B major for instance.25
Exercises
Mikuli noted that Chopins students studied Clementis Prludes et Exercices in a
sequence corresponding to their scale practice.26 As his students progressed, Chopin also
assigned selections from Cramers Etudes, Clementis Gradus ad Parnassum,
Moscheless Stylstudien zur hheren Vollendung, J.S. Bachs Suites, and fugues from
Das Wohltemperirte Clavier. 27 His most advanced students were also assigned selections
from his Etudes, Opp. 10 and 25.28

Carl Mikuli, foreword to Fr. Chopins Pianoforte-Werke, 17 vols., ed. Carl


Mikuli (Leipzig: Kistner, 1880), 3.
24

Frdric Chopin, Projet de Mthode; quoted in Jean-Jacques, Eigeldinger,


Chopin: Pianist and Teacher as Seen By His Pupils, trans. Naomi Shohet with Krysia
Osostowicz and Roy Howat, ed. Roy Howat (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1986), 34.
25

Mikuli, Fr. Chopins Pianoforte-Werke, 3.

26

Ibid., 3-4.

27

Ibid.

28

23
Chopin and Psychological Processes Involved in Playing the Piano
In the sketches for his method, Chopin differentiated between three categories of
technical study based on intervals: those based on adjacent notes, disjunct notes, and
double notes. Writing there is nothing more to be invented for study as far as
mechanism of piano playing [Chopins italics] is concerned, Chopin seemed to imply
the existence of other areas of study related to piano playing aside from what he termed,
the mechanism.29 Particular mention can be made of Chopins thoughts regarding
touch, sentiment, and psychological processes in approaching a piece of music.
With regard to his teaching style, Mikuli and Kleczynski each made reference to
Chopins attention to touch and tone. A maximum of suppleness (facilement,
facilement [easily, easily] he would repeat tirelessly), and a cultivation of sensitivity of
hearing and touchthese were the purposes of the exercises he prescribed in the first
lessons.30 Chopins philosophy also directed that, any work selected for study should
be carefully analysed for its formal structure, as well as for the feelings and psychological
processes which it evokes.31
As a pedagogue, Chopin advocated inspired concise practice. He feared above
all . . . the abrutissement [stupefaction by overwork] of the pupils. One day he heard me
Frdric Chopin, Projet de Mthode; quoted in Jean-Jacques Eigeldinger,
Chopin: Pianist and Teacher as Seen By His Pupils, ed. Roy Howat, trans. Naomi
Shohet with Krysia Osostowicz and Roy Howat (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1986), 25.
29

Eigeldinger, Chopin, 17.

30

Raoul Koczalski, Frdric Chopin. Betrachtungen, Skizzen, Analysen (Kln:


Tischer & Jagenberg, 1936), 13.
31

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say that I practiced six hours a day. He became quite angry, and forbade me to practise
more than three hours.32 Duboiss experience was corroborated by Gretsch as well. He
always advised the pupil not to work for too long at a stretch and to intermit between
hours of work by reading a good book, by looking at masterpieces of art, or by taking an
invigorating walk.33
Finally, as part of his teaching, Chopins students had ample opportunity to
observe and imitate their teacher. Fields and his own Nocturnes also figured to some
extent as Etudes, for through them the pupil would learnpartly from his explanations,
partly from observing and imitating Chopin, who played them indefatigably to the
pupilto recognize, love and produce the beautiful bound [gebunden] vocal tone and
the legato.34
Chopins methods, revolutionary for their time in comparison to many of his
contemporaries, sound familiar to pianists of this day and age. His approach to both
composition and pedagogy was exceptional in that he intuitively demonstrated attitudes
and ideas which, having since been accepted and practiced ubiquitously amongst pianists,
are now finding support in the sciences. These aspects will be addressed in a subsequent
chapter.

Frederick Niecks, Frederick Chopin as a Man and Musician, Vol. II (London:


Novello, 1902), 183-4.
32

Grewingk, Eine Tochter Alt-Rigas, 20.

33

Mikuli, foreword to Fr. Chopins Pianoforte-Werke, 4.

34

25
CHAPTER 3
THE NEUROMUSCULAR SYSTEM, HAND PHYSIOLOGY, AND PIANO
PRACTICE AND PERFORMANCE: AN OVERVIEW OF SELECT ISSUES
The Nature-Nurture Debate
One of most enduring discussions in science and medicine concerns the naturenurture debate, an argument regarding the extent to which a person is a product of either
his or her genes or his or her environment and experiences.35 The debate has drawn
increasing interest, particularly with regard to human intellectual and physical
performance.
With respect to genetic influences and variability, molecular biologists have
attempted to identify single gene variants that might either lead to a particular disease or
profoundly impact individual performance. For example, efforts have been made to
identify sprinters and endurance runners on the basis of differing forms of a single gene.36
Rarely, however, is one gene solely responsible for a particular trait. Furthermore,
studies on human behavior have demonstrated that genes work in combined networks to

See V. J. Vitzthum, A Number No Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts: The Use
and Abuse of Heritability, Human Biology 75 (2003): 539-88; E. O. Wilson,
Sociobiology: The New Synthesis (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1975); H.
Hellman, Great Feuds in Science: Ten of the Liveliest Disputes Ever (New York: Wiley,
1998); S. Ceci and W. Williams, The Nature-Nurture Debate: The Essential Readings
(New York: Blackwell Publishing Co., 2000), and R. C. Lewontin, It Aint Necessarily
So: The Dream of the Human Genome and Other Illusions (London: Granta Books,
2000).
35

See A. Coghlan, Elite Athletes Born to Run, New Scientist 30 (2003): 4-5 and
N. Yang et al., ACTN3 Genotype is Associated with Human Elite Athletic
Performance, American Journal of Human Genetics 73 (2003): 627-31.
36

26
influence biological function.37 All observable properties of an organism are determined
by the workings of a degenerate network of many genes.38 Degeneracy in gene
networks promotes evolutionary fitness of a species by ensuring that genetic diversity
supports functional adaptation to variable environments.39
On the other hand, significant support for the importance of environment and
experience is drawn from studies involving skills such as cigar rolling40 and reading
inverted text,41 studies which have demonstrated a strong correlation between time spent
practicing and improvements in performance. Ericsson et al. also concluded that the
primary factor distinguishing violinists at different skill levels was the number of hours
spent in deliberate practice, practice characterized by focused attention; relevant,
effortful activities; and specific performance goals.42 While it has also been demonstrated

T. D. Johnston and L. Edwards, Genes, Interactions and the Development of


Behaviour, Psychological Review 109 (2002): 26-34.
37

G. M. Edelman and J. A. Gally, Degeneracy and Complexity in Biological


Systems, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of
America 98 (2001): 13766.
38

K. Davids and J. Baker, Genes, Environment and Sport Performance: Why the
Nature-Nurture Dualism is No Longer Relevant, Sports Medicine 37(11) (2007): 975.
39

E. R. F. W. Crossman, A Theory of the Acquisition of Speed-Skill,


Ergonomics 2 (1959): 153-66.
40

P. A. Kolers, Memorial Consequences of Automatized Encoding, Journal of


Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory 1 (1975): 689-701.
41

K. A. Ericsson, R. T. Krampe, and C. Tesch-Rmer, The Role of Deliberate


Practice in the Acquisition of Expert Performance, Psychological Review 100 (1993):
363-406.
42

27
that expert athletes accumulate more training hours than non-experts,43 the notion that
simply acquiring a particular number of training hours to develop expertise has received
significant criticism. As noted by Davids and Baker, however, there seems to be little
doubt that attention to high-quality training is critical for promoting the development of
expert performance.44 That leads one to consider the processes involved in training and
the increasing emphasis on what appears to be, a complementary relationship between
nature and nurture since neither environmental nor genetic constraints are able to account
for all the data on performance variability.45
The complementary nature of phenomena in the natural world suggests that it
is highly important for geneticists to identify many single gene variants, although the role
of these genes in regulating behaviour needs to be framed by their overarching tendencies
to network and to cooperate or compete with environmental constraints.46 One of the
formidable challenges facing behavioral researchers is that performance-related variables
are not completely predictable, and yet it seems reasonable that we might be able to better

See J. L. Starkes et al., Deliberate Practice in Sports: What is it Anyway? in


The Road to Excellence: The Acquisition of Expert Performance in the Arts, Sciences,
Sports and Games, ed. K. A. Ericsson (Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum, 1996), 80-106; W. F.
Helsen, J. L. Starkes, and N. J. Hodges, Team Sports and the Theory of Deliberate
Practice, Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology 20 (1998): 12-34; and T. Hodge and J.
Deakin, Deliberate Practice and Expertise in the Martial Arts: The Role of Context in
Motor Recall, Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology 20 (1998): 260-79.
43

Davids and Baker, Genes, Environment and Sport Performance, 966.

44

J. A. S. Kelso and D. A. Engstrm, The Complementary Nature (Cambridge,


MA: MIT Press, 2006).
45

Davids and Baker, Genes, Environment and Sport Performance, 962-80.

46

28
understand a range of influence of particular variables which might affect performance.
The following will focus on integrating principles regarding the neuromuscular system
and hand physiology with piano practice and performance.
Skill Training and the Central Nervous System
The dynamic relationship of biological factors and environmental influences is
exemplified by research regarding the plasticity, or changing structure, of the central
nervous system in response to learning and experience.47 Morphological and functional
characteristics of the neuromuscular system change with chronic levels of physical
activity. These changes, or adaptations, affect performance variables such as muscle
contraction force, power, and the rate of force development (RFD).48 Research has
demonstrated that significant effects associated with motor training include neural
adaptations,49 such as experience-specific patterns of plasticity induced across the motor

K. A. Dodge, The Nature-Nurture Debate and Public Policy, Merrill-Palmer


Quarterly 50 (2004): 418-27.
47

See P. Aagaard et al., A Mechanism for Increased Contractile Strength of


Human Pennate Muscle in Response to Strength Training: Changes in Muscle
Architecture, Journal of Physiology 534 (2001): 613-23.
48

See P. Aagaard et al., Neural Inhibition During Maximal Eccentric and


Concentric Quadriceps Contractions: Effects of Resistance Training, Journal of Applied
Physiology 89 (2000): 2249-57; P. Aagaard et al., Neural Adaptation to Resistance
Training: Changes in Evoked V-Wave and H-Reflex Responses, Journal of Applied
Physiology 92 (2002): 2309-18; and M. Van Cutsem, J. Duchateau, and K. Hainuat,
Changes in Single Motor Unit Behavior Contribute to the Increase in Contraction Speed
After Dynamic Training in Humans, Journal of Physiology 513 (1998): 295-305.
49

29
cortex and spinal cord50 and changes in motor unit behavior and muscle. Furthermore,
with regard to both neural and physiological adaptations, the adaptations appear to be in
response to differential motor experience and training. The following discussion will
focus on neural plasticity associated with skill training.
Neural Plasticity
Significant evidence supporting the role of neural factors comes from studies
involving limb immobilization, aging, and those demonstrating phenomena particular to
strength training. For example, increases in strength occur in the first few weeks of
training prior to any significant increase in muscle mass.51 Furthermore, observed

See M. J. N. McDonagh and C. T. M. Davies, Adaptive Response of


Mammalian Skeletal Muscle to Exercise with High Loads, European Journal of Applied
Physiology 52 (1984): 139-55; D. G. Sale, Neural Adaptation to Resistance Training,
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 20 (1988): S135-45; R. M. Enoka, Neural
Adaptations with Chronic Physical Activity, Journal of Biomechanics 30 (1996): 44755; DeAnna L. Adkins et al., Motor Training Induces Experience-Specific Patterns of
Plasticity Across Motor Cortex and Spinal Cord, Journal of Applied Physiology 101
(2006): 1776-82; and D. Gabriel, G. Kamen, and G. Frost, Neural Adaptations to
Resistive Exercise: Mechanisms and Recommendations for Training Practices, Sports
Medicine 36 (2): 133-49.
50

See R. C. Hickson et al., Successive Time Courses of Strength Development and


Steroid Hormone Responses to Heavy-Resistance Training, Journal of Applied
Physiology 76 (1994): 663-70; D. A. Jones and O. M. Rutherford, Human Muscle
Strength Training: The Effects of Three Different Regimes and the Nature of the
Resultant Changes, Journal of Physiology (London) 391 (1987): 1-11; P. V. Komi,
Training of Muscle Strength and Power: Interaction of Neuromotoric, Hypertrophic,
and Mechanical Factors, International Journal of Sports Medicine 7 (1986): 10-5; N.
McCartney et al., The Effects of Strength Training in Patients with Selected
Neuromuscular Disorder, Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 20 (1988): 362-8;
M. V. Narici et al., Changes in Forces, Cross-Sectional Areas and Neural Activation
During Strength Training and Detraining of the Human Quadriceps, European Journal of
Applied Physiology 66 (1989): 310-9; and L. L. Ploutz et al., Effect of Resistance
51

30
increases in strength are evident not only in the trained limb, but in the contralateral,
untrained limb as well, an effect known as cross-education.52 Finally, increases in
strength do not transfer to all activities in which the trained muscle is involved.53
While this evidence supports the likelihood that neural mechanisms are significant
in neuromuscular adaptations associated with physical activity and training, it has been
much more difficult to identify the particular mechanisms involved. This has led some
scientists to conclude that the mechanisms mediating neuromuscular adaptations
probably vary across conditions, but, in general, must be related to the maximality,
specificity, or pattern of the neural drive to the muscle.54 For example, most normally
active individuals find it difficult to maximally activate a particular muscle by voluntary
command which in turn limits the force one might elicit as well.55 It appears, however
that this ability may be influenced by ones level of chronic physical activity.

Training on Muscle Use During Exercise, Journal of Applied Physiology 76 (1994):


1675-81.
R. M. Enoka, Muscle Strength and its Development: New Perspectives,
Sports Medicine 6 (1988): 146-68.
52

O. M. Rutherford and D. A. Jones, The Role of Learning and Coordination in


Strength Training, European Journal of Applied Physiology 55 (1986): 100-5.
53

R. M. Enoka, Neural Adaptations with Chronic Physical Activity, Journal of


Biomechanics 30(5) (1997): 448.
54

See Allen et al., Reliability of Measurements of Muscle Strength and Voluntary


Activation Using Twitch Interpolation, Muscle & Nerve 18 (1995): 583-600; Adams et
al., Mapping of Electrical Muscle Stimulation Using MRI, Journal of Applied
Physiology 74 (1993): 532-7; R. M. Enoka and A. J. Fuglevand, Neuromuscular Basis of
the Maximum Voluntary Force Capacity of Muscle, in Current Issues in Biomechanics,
55

31
Motor Cortex
The primary motor cortex is organized into highly interconnected neural
assemblies that control discrete movements across different joints.56 Motor skill
acquisition apparently involves changes in the connectivity between these neural
assemblies,57 changes particular to the nature of ones motor experience. With regard to
skill training, Adkins et al. suggest that these changes include synaptogenesis, synaptic
potentiation, and the reorganization of movement representations within motor cortex.58
ed. M. D. Grabiner (Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 1993), 215-35; F. Bellemare et al.,
Motor-Unit Discharge Rates During Maximal Voluntary Contractions of Three Human
Muscles, Journal of Neurophysiology 50 (1983): 1380-92; C. J. De Luca et al.,
Behavior of Human Motor Units in Different Muscles During Linearly Varying
Contractions, Journal of Physiology (London) 329 (1982): 113-28; A. Y. Belanger and
A. J. McComas, Extent of Motor Unit Activation During Effort, Journal of Applied
Physiology 51 (1981): 381-93; C. G. Kukulka and H. P. Clamann, Comparison of the
Recruitment and Discharge Properties of Motor Units in Human Brachial Biceps and
Adductor Pollicis During Isometric Contractions, Brain Research 219 (1981): 45-55; A.
W. Monster and H. Chan, Isometric Force Production by Motor Units of Extensor
Digitorum Communis Muscle in Man, Journal of Neurophysiology 40 (1977): 1432-43;
H. J. Freund, H. J. Bdingen, and V. Dietz, Activity of Single Motor Units from Human
Forearm Muscles During Voluntary Isometric Contractions, Journal of Neurophysiology
38 (1975): 933-46; and J. Tanji and M. Kato, Firing Rate of Individual Motor Units in
Voluntary Contraction of Abductor Digit Minimi Muscle in Man, Experimental
Neurology 40 (1973): 771-83.
See J. P. Donoghue and S. P. Wise, The Motor Cortex of the Rat:
Cytoarchitecture and Microstimulation Mapping, The Journal of Comparative
Neurology 212 (1982): 76-88; A. Keller, Intrinsic Synaptic Organization of the Motor
Cortex, Cerebral Cortex 3 (1993): 430-41; and Schieber, Constraints on Somatotopic
Organization, 2125-43.
56

M. Graziano, The Organization of Behavioral Repertoire in Motor Cortex,


Annual Review of Neuroscience 29 (2006): 105-34.
57

Adkins et al., Motor Training Induces Experience-Specific Patterns of

58

32
Transcranial magnetic stimulation and neuroimaging studies have demonstrated
changes in the human motor cortex59 similar to results obtained in studies involving rats.60

Plasticity, 1776-82.
See J. Classen et al., Multimodal Output Mapping of Human Central Motor
Representation on Different Spatial Scales, Journal of Physiology 512 (1998): 163-79;
M. Hund-Georgiadis and D. Y. von Cramon, Motor-Learning-Related Changes in Piano
Players and Non-Musicians Revealed by Functional Magnetic-Resonance Signals,
Experimental Brain Research 125 (1999): 417-25; A. Karni et al., Functional MRI
Evidence for Adult Motor Cortex Plasticity During Motor Skill Learning, Nature 377
(1995): 155-8; and A. Pascual-Leone et al., The Role of Reading Activity on the
Modulation of Motor Cortical Outputs to the Reading Hand in Braille Readers, Annals
of Neurology 34 (1993): 33-7.
59

See R. P. Allred and T. A. Jones, Unilateral Ischemic Sensorimotor Cortical


Damage in Female Rats: Forelimb Behavioral Effects and Dendritic Structural Plasticity
in the Contralateral Homotopic Cortex, Experimental Neurology 190 (2004): 433-45; S.
D. Bury and T. A. Jones, Unilateral Sensorimotor Cortex Lesions in Adult Rats
Facilitate Motor Skill Learning with the Unaffected Forelimb and Training-Induced
Dendritic Structural Plasticity in the Motor Cortex, Journal of Neuroscience 22 (2002):
8597-8606; W. T. Greenough, J. R. Larson, and G. S. Withers, Effects of Unilateral and
Bilateral Training in a Reaching Task on Dendritic Branching of Neurons in the Rat
Motor-Sensory Forelimb Cortex, Behavioral and Neural Biology 44 (1985): 301-14; T.
A. Jones, Multiple Synapse Formation in the Motor Cortex Opposite Unilateral
Sensorimotor Cortex Lesions in Adult Rats, Journal of Comparative Neurology 414
(1999) 57-66; T. A. Jones, C. J. Chu, L. A. Grande, and A. D. Gregory, Motor Skills
Training Enhances Lesion-Induced Structural Plasticity in the Motor Cortex of Adult
Rats, Journal of Neuroscience 19 (1999): 10153-63; J. A. Kleim et al., Motor
Learning-Dependent Synaptogenesis is Localized to Functionally Reorganized Motor
Cortex, Neurobiology of Learning and Memory 77 (2002): 63-77; J. A. Kleim, S.
Barbay, and R. J. Nudo, Functional Reorganization of the Rat Motor Cortex Following
Motor Skill Learning, Journal of Neurophysiology 80 (1998): 3321-25; J. A. Kleim et
al., Cortical Synaptogenesis and Motor Map Reorganization Occur During Late, but Not
Early, Phase of Motor Skill Learning, Journal of Neuroscience 24 (2004): 628-33; J. A.
Kleim et al., Synaptogenesis and Fos Expression in the Motor Cortex of the Adult Rat
After Motor Skill Learning, Journal of Neuroscience 16 (1996): 4529-35; and Y. Wang
et al., Motor Learning Changes GABAergic Terminals on Spinal Motoneurons in
Normal Rats, European Journal of Neuroscience 23 (2006): 141-50.
60

33
Individuals trained to produce skilled digit movements on a piano display an increase in
the area of digit representation corresponding to the trained hand and a decrease in motorevoked potential (MEP) threshold.61 Similar cortical changes have been observed in
blind braille readers62 and subjects trained in ankle63 and tongue tasks.64 Furthermore,
highly skilled volleyball players have larger map areas and more overlapping
representations of medial deltoid and carpi radialis muscles than runners, a finding
consistent with volleyball players acquisition of coordinated shoulder movement
sequences.65

A. Pascual-Leone et al., Modulation of Muscle Responses Evoked by


Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation During the Acquisition of New Fine Motor Skills,
Journal of Neurophysiology 74 (1995): 1037-45.
61

See A. Pascual-Leone et al., Modulation of Motor Cortical Outputs to the


Reading Hand of Braille Readers, Annals of Neurology 34 (1993): 33-7; A. PascualLeone, J. Grafman, and M. Hallett, Procedural Learning and Prefrontal Cortex, Annals
of the New York Academy of Sciences 769 (1995): 61-70; and Pascual-Leone et al., The
Role of Reading Activity, 910-15.
62

M. A. Perez et al., Motor Skill Training Induces Changes in the Excitability of


the Leg Cortical Area in Healthy Humans, Experimental Brain Research 159 (2004):
197-205.
63

P. Svensson et al., Plasticity in Corticomotor Control of the Human Tongue


Musculature Induced by Tongue-Task Training, Experimental Brain Research 152
(2003): 42-51.
64

F. Tyc, A. Boyadjian, and H. Devanne, Motor Cortex Plasticity Induced by


Extensive Training Revealed by Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in Human, The
European Journal of Neuroscience 21 (2005): 259-66.
65

34
Spinal Mechanisms
The spinal cord is the final common pathway involved in motor behavior, but the
ways in which it is specifically involved in motor skill are largely unknown. Research
involving operant conditioning of spinal reflexes has demonstrated how learning may
induce spinal cord plasticity. Specifically, studies involving operant conditioning of the
spinal stretch reflex (SSR) and its electrical analog, the H reflex, have shown that
humans,66 monkeys,67 and rats68 can gradually increase or decrease the SSR or H reflex.
A conditioned decrease in the H reflex is due to an increase in motoneuron firing
threshold whereas an increase in the reflex is the result of reduced inhibition of the
motoneuron.69 Decreasing the H reflex causes an increase of inhibitory synapses onto the
spinal cord70 and reduced motoneuron axon conductance.71

R. L. Segal et al., Uncoupling of Human Short and Long Latency Stretch Reflex
Responses with Operant Conditioning, Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience 17
(2000): 17-22.
66

J. S. Carp and J. R. Wolpaw, Motoneuron Properties After Operantly


Conditioned Increase in Primate H-Reflex, Journal of Neurophysiology 73 (1995): 136573.
67

X. Y. Chen, L. Chen, and J. R. Wolpaw, Time Course of H-Reflex Conditioning


in the Rat, Neuroscience Letters 302 (2001): 85-8.
68

See J. S. Carp and J. R. Wolpaw, Motoneuron Plasticity Underlying Operantly


Conditioned Decrease in Primate H-Reflex, Journal of Neurophysiology 72 (1994): 43142 and Carp and Wolpaw, Motoneuron Properties, 1365-73.
69

See K. C. Feng-Chen and J. R. Wolpaw, Operant Conditioning of H-Reflex


Changes Synaptic Terminals on Primate Motoneurons, Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 93 (1996): 9206-11 and Wang et al.,
Motor Learning Changes GABAergic Terminals, 141-50.
70

35
Several studies have demonstrated that changes in spinal reflexes also occur
during long-term training of more complex limb movements.72 Collectively, the data
indicate that operant conditioned motor skills induce alterations in the spinal cord.
Further studies are necessary, however, to better understand the exact nature of these
adaptations.
Motor Units
Several observations suggest the likelihood of motoneuron adaptation to training.
For example, in a study of motor units of the first dorsal interosseus, Adam, De Luca, and
Erim demonstrated that average firing rates, initial firing rates, and firing rate discharge
variability were all significantly lower for the dominant as opposed to the nondominant
hand.73 Furthermore, while several studies have demonstrated that humans are unable to
fully activate muscles voluntarily,74 some evidence suggests that adaptations in motor unit

J. S. Carp et al., Operant Conditioning of Rat H-Reflex Affects Motoneuron


Axonal Conduction Velocity, Experimental Brain Research 136 (2001): 269-73.
71

See J. Meyer-Lohmann, C. N. Christakos, and H. Wolf, Dominance of the


Short-Latency Component in Perturbation Induced Electromyographic Responses of
Long-Trained Monkeys, Experimental Brain Research 64 (1986): 393-9 and R. V. Ung
et al., On the Potential Role of the Corticospinal Tract in the Control and Progressive
Adaptation of the Soleus H-Reflex During Backward Walking, Journal of
Neurophysiology 94 (2005): 1133-42.
72

A. Adam, C. J. De Luca, and Z. Erim, Hand Dominance and Motor Unit Firing
Behavior, Journal of Neurophysiology 80 (1998): 1373-82.
73

See Enoka and Fuglevand, Neuromuscular Basis, 215-35; J. J. Dowling et al.,


Are Humans Able to Voluntarily Elicit Maximum Muscle Force? Neuroscience Letters
1994 (179): 25-8; S. Gandevia, Spinal and Supraspinal Factors in Human Muscle
Fatigue, Physiological Reviews 2001 (81): 1725-89; and C. A. Knight and G. Kamen,
74

36
activity may contribute to improvements in motor performance. On one hand, for
example, Kamen and Knight demonstrated that increases in the maximal rate of torque
development following six weeks of strength training were accompanied by increases in
the maximal discharge rate of motor units.75 This is significant since the force a muscle
exerts is dependent upon motor unit activity,76 specifically, the number of motor units
recruited and the rate at which they discharge action potentials. On the other hand, force
modulation training results in decreased recruitment thresholds in young adults and
reduced firing frequencies of motor units at percentages of maximal voluntary
contraction.77 This in turn allows more precise and accurate control with regard to
various increments of muscle force.78

Adaptations in Muscular Activation of the Knee Extensor Muscles with Strength


Training in Young and Older Adults, Journal of Electromyography and Kinesiology 11
(2001): 405-12.
G. Kamen and C. A. Knight, Training-Related Adaptations in Motor Unit
Discharge Rate in Young and Older Adults, The Journals of Gerontology. Series A,
Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences 59 (2004): 1334-8.
75

E. Adrian and D. Bronk, The Discharge of Impulses in Motor Nerve Fibres. II.
The Frequency of Discharges in Reflex and Voluntary Contractions, Journal of
Physiology 204 (1929): 231-57.
76

C. Patten and G. Kamen, Adaptations in Motor Unit Discharge Activity with


Force Control Training in Young and Older Human Adults, European Journal of Applied
Physiology and Occupational Physiology 83 (2000): 128-43.
77

M. Bernardi et al., Motor Unit Recruitment Strategy Changes with Skill


Acquisition, European Journal of Applied Physiology 74 (1996): 52-9.
78

37
It is important to note that the force a muscle exerts during a voluntary contraction
is not constant. Instead, it is influenced by factors such as the intensity of the contraction,
the type of muscle contraction, the muscle group involved in the task, the level of
physiological arousal, and fatigue and therefore fluctuates around an average intended
value.79 This variability is exacerbated at low levels of force because recruited motor
units are contributing an unfused tetanus to the net force.80
-Motoneurons
Properties of -motoneurons change under a variety of conditions, during
development81 and following spinal cord injury,82 for example. Gardiner, Dai, and

See E. A. Christou, M. Grossman, and L. G. Carlton, Modeling Variability of


Force During Isometric Quadriceps Femoris Muscle Contractions, Journal of Motor
Behavior 34 (2002): 67-81; E. A. Christou, M Zelent, and L. G. Carlton, Force Control
is Greater in Upper Compared with the Lower Extremity, Journal of Motor Behavior 35
(2003): 322-4; M. E. Galganski, A. J. Fuglevand, and R. M. Enoka, Reduced Control of
Motor Output in a Human Hand Muscle of Elderly Subjects During Submaximal
Contractions, Journal of Neurophysiology 69 (1993): 2108-15; C. J. Mottram et al.,
Frequency Modulation of Motor Unit Discharge Has Task-Dependent Effects on
Fluctuations in Motor Output, Journal of Neurophysiology 94 (2005): 2878-87; and T.
Rudroff et al., Net Excitation of the Motor Unit Pool Varied with Load Type During
Fatiguing Contractions, Muscle & Nerve 29 (2005): 78-87.
79

See Z. Erim et al. Rank-Ordered Regulation of Motor Units, Muscle & Nerve
19 (1996): 563-73; V. G. Macefield, A. J. Fuglevand, and B. Bigland-Ritchie,
Contractile Properties of Single Motor Units in Human Toe Extensors Assessed by
Intraneural Motor Axon Stimulation, Journal of Neurophysiology 75 (1996): 2509-19;
Monster and Chan, Isometric Force Production, 1432-43; and C. T. Moritz et al.,
Discharge Rate Variability Influences the Variation in Force Fluctuations Across the
Working Range of a Hand Muscle, Journal of Neurophysiology 93 (2005): 2449-59.
80

N. Alessandri-Haber et al., Molecular Determinants of Emerging Excitability in


Rat Embryonic Motoneurons, Journal of Physiology 541 (2002): 25-39.
81

38
Heckman note that these changes include changes in properties that would be expected
to alter the ways in which neurons, and neuronal circuits, translate and transfer excitation
patterns into trains of action potentials at the end organ.83 They also cite the following
as known adaptations to -motoneurons in response to exercise training: increased
dendritic arbor; increased protein synthesis and altered gene expression; altered ion
conductances in soma and the initial segment; increased axon transport of maintenance
proteins, neurotrophins and receptors; metabolic signals from muscles, and enhanced
neuromuscular transmission efficacy.84
While the functional implications of some of these adaptations are less obvious
and require further study, several of these adaptations likely have functional
consequences during endurance exercise. One significant observation is increased
synaptic efficacy resulting from enhanced neurotransmitter release occurring with
increased activity.85 The effect is decreased likelihood that neuromuscular propagation
might be impaired during sustained activation of the neuromuscular junction.
See E. Beaumont et al., Passive Exercise and Fetal Spinal Cord Transplant Both
Help to Restore Motoneuronal Properties After Spinal Cord Transection in Rats,
Muscle & Nerve 29 (2004): 234-42 and S. Hochman and D. McCrea, Effects of Chronic
Spinalization on Ankle Extensor Motoneurons. II. Motoneuron Electrical Properties,
Journal of Neurophysiology 71(1994): 1468-79.
82

P. Gardiner, Y. Dai, and C. J. Heckman, Effects of Exercise Training on Motoneurons, Journal of Applied Physiology 101 (2006): 1228.
83

Ibid., 1229.

84

See A. Argaw, P. Desaulniers, and P. F. Gardiner, Enhanced Neuromuscular


Transmission Efficacy in Overloaded Rat Plantaris Muscle, Muscle & Nerve 29 (2004):
97-103; P. Desaulniers, P. A. Lavoie, and P. F. Gardiner, Habitual Exercise Enhances
85

39
Further research is necessary to study motoneurons in conditions closer to those in
vivo during exercise.
Hand Physiology
Philosophies of piano practice with regard to motor learning and skill acquisition
continue to evolve in order to enhance efficiency and maintain physical health. Training
of skeletal muscle is a complicated issue with many interrelated variables, the
relationships of which may not be fully understood. Nevertheless, the aspiring pianist
may benefit from the most recent research regarding physiology and training techniques.
Discussion of basic properties of muscles, how muscles function, and issues particular to
the human hand will lay the foundation for considering physiological aspects of several
Chopin tudes.
Skeletal Muscles and Motor Units
Histochemical characteristics, those related to the composition of cells and tissues
in the body, and structural and behavioral characteristics underlie functional properties of
muscle such as the magnitude of force a muscle is capable of generating, the speed with
which force is developed, and the length of time force may be maintained.86 There are
two general categories of muscle fibers, fast twitch and slow twitch. The primary

Neuromuscular Transmission Efficacy of Rat Soleus Muscle in Situ, Journal of Applied


Physiology 90 (2001): 1041-8; and M. Dorlchter et al., Effects of Enhanced Activity
on Synaptic Transmission in Mouse Extensor Digitorum Longus Muscle, Journal of
Physiology 436 (1991): 283-92.
Walter F. Boron and Emile L. Boulpaep, Medical Physiology: A Cellular and
Molecular Approach (China: Elsevier Science, 2003), 147.
86

40
functional difference between them is the time required for each to reach peak tension.
Fast twitch, or type II fibers, require approximately one-seventh of the time required by
slow twitch, or type I fibers, to reach peak tension.87 Another significant difference
between muscle types is the length of time they are able to maintain force, in other words
the extent to which the muscles resist fatigue. Whereas slow-twitch fibers have the
ability to sustain moderate contractions for tens of minutes or even hours, fast-twitch
fibers, those fibers associated with maximal contractions of a muscle group, fatigue
within tens of seconds or minutes.88 The soleus in the lower leg is an example of a
muscle comprised of mainly slow-twitch fibers while muscles of the eye are mainly fasttwitch. Interestingly, muscles of the human hand have a significantly greater proportion
of fast-twitch fibers than slow-twitch fibers in the dominant hand and vice versa.89
Structural Differences Within Individual Muscle Fibers
Muscle fibers comprise several types of proteinsmyosin, actin, and six
accessory proteins. Although the contraction of muscle occurs as a result of a chain of
events associated with the interaction of actin and myosin, the characteristics of muscle
contractions are thought to be significantly related to the structure of myosin. Each
molecule of myosin is comprised of two heavy chains (HC) and four light chains (LC),
and different muscles express different forms of myosin heavy chains (MHC) and myosin

Ibid., 152.

87

Ibid., 1244.

88

L. Jsza et al., Specific Fibre Composition of Human Hand and Arm Muscles,
Handchirurgie 10 (3) (1978): 153-7.
89

41
light chains (MLC). Differences in the proportions in which these chains are expressed
are implicated in contraction velocity and result in several types of type II fibers.
Physiology of Movement Control
Speed
It is apparent that training-induced adaptations in contractile function and fibertype characteristics depend upon duration, intensity, frequency, and the type of training
program used. Results of current research indicate that resistance training enhances crosssectional area of muscle and force generated by muscle fibers while endurance training
increases maximal unloaded shortening velocity of muscles.
Exercise Training and Maximal Shortening Velocity (Vmax)
It is a consistent finding that dynamic, but not isometric training, increases
maximal shortening velocity (Vmax) of muscles. Isometric training is a type of strength
training in which joint angle and muscle length are maintained either by working against
an immovable force or in opposition to fixed resistance. On the other hand, dynamic
training keeps the joints and muscles moving. Examples of dynamic training include
biking, running, swimming, and weight training. Duchateau and Hainaut found that three
months of isometric training at peak voluntary force failed to alter Vmax, but a similar
period of dynamic training performed at a resistance equivalent to thirty to forty percent
of peak force increased Vmax by twenty-one percent.90 It is thought that this increase may
be the result of an increase in the Vmax of individual fibers expressing a particular MHC
J. Duchateau and K. Hainaut, Isometric or Dynamic Training: Differential
Effects on Mechanical Properties of a Human Muscle, Journal of Applied Physiology
56(2) (1984): 296-301.
90

42
isoform.91 Strength training increases the number of Type IIa MHC at the expense of
fibers expressing Types IIx or IIb MHC. Because human skeletal muscle fibers
expressing either IIb or IIx MHC have greater maximal shortening velocity than fibers
expressing Type IIa MHC (R. H. Fitts and J. J. Widrick, unpublished data 1995),92 a
change in MHC expression would be expected to affect the Vmax of the whole muscle.
Force
Two basic types of training influence both the force a muscle is capable of
generating and its ability to resist fatigue. Endurance training promotes increased
resistance to fatigue and therefore greater ability to maintain submaximal power output
while strength training facilitates the ability to generate greater force.93
Strength is defined as the capacity to exert force under a particular set of
biomechanical conditions; however, most movements arise from the cooperation of a
number of muscles acting together. The amount of force that can be generated in a
particular movement is therefore determined not only by intramuscular factors but by the
relative coordination of muscles as well. While it is likely that neural adaptations
contribute to increases in strength by facilitating coordination amongst muscles, it is
widely documented that resistance training can lead, not only to neural adaptations, but
R. H. Fitts and J. J. Widrick, Muscle Mechanics: Adaptations with ExerciseTraining, Exercise and Sport Sciences Reviews 24 (1996): 427-73.
91

See L. Larsson and R. L. Moss, Maximum Velocity of Shortening in Relation


to Myosin Isoform Composition in Single Fibres From Human Skeletal Muscles, The
Journal of Physiology 472(1) (1993): 595-614 and R. H. Fitts and J. J. Widrick,
unpublished data, 1995.
92

Boron and Boulpaep, Medical Physiology, 1244.

93

43
changes in structural and histochemical properties of muscle resulting in increased
muscular strength.
Gradation of Force
Properties of muscle are dependent upon a balance of characteristics which
facilitate the variety of movements of which human beings are capable. Of primary
importance to the pianist is the ability to control the speed at which the piano key
descends which is in turn dependent upon the force with which it is depressed. The
ability to depress piano keys with an infinite variety of movements relies on the ability to
exert force in such a way that movements are both smooth and graded. Muscle fibers
belonging to a single motor unit are all of the same type but may interdigitate with those
from another. The interdigitation, together with the orderly recruitment of motor units,
permits a graded response that is evenly distributed through the cross section of the
muscle.
Not only are musicians more accurate than non-musicians in reaching a desired
force, but musicians also exhibit better control over the fingers at all levels of force.94 It
has also been demonstrated that accuracy of force production increases as a function of
practice, and this accuracy is largely attributed to neural adaptation and/or motor
learning.95 Deficient coordination, or the inability of muscles to contract at the most

S. M. Slobounov et al., Modulated Cortical Control of Individual Fingers in


Experienced Musicians: An EEG Study, Clinical Neurophysiology 113 (2002): 201324.
94

H. Chiang, S. M. Slobounov, and W. Ray, Practice-Related Modulations of


Force Enslaving and Cortical Activity as Revealed by EEG, Clinical Neurophysiology
95

44
optimal force levels for a particular motor task, is largely related to high brain
mechanisms including the neocortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum, and brainstem.
Force and Efficiency
Two-joint and multi-joint muscles
Many muscles in the human body, including those crossing the wrist and all
finger joints, cross two or more joints. Because the amount of tension present in any
muscle is essentially constant throughout its length as well as at the sites of tendinous
attachment to bone, these muscles affect motion at both or all of the joints crossed. One
disadvantage associated with two-joint and multi-joint muscles is known as active
insufficiency. Active insufficiency refers to the fact that two-joint and multi-joint
muscles are incapable of shortening to the extent required to produce a full range of
motion at all joints simultaneously. For example, finger flexors are unable to produce as
tight a fist when the wrist is in flexion as when it is in a neutral position.
Bilateral deficit
In normally active individuals, the maximum force a muscle can exert decreases
when the homologous muscle in the contralateral limb is activated concurrently.96 In

115 (2004): 1033-43.


See T. Ohtsuki, Decrease in Human Voluntary Isometric Arm Strength Induced
by Simultaneous Bilateral Exertions, Behavioural Brain Research 7 (1983): 165-78; P.
Schantz et al., Maximal Voluntary Force of Bilateral and Unilateral Leg Extension,
Acta Physiologica Scandinavica 136 (1989): 185-92; N. J. Secher, S. Rorsgarrd, and O.
Secher, Contralateral Influence on Recruitment of Curarized Muscle Fibres During
Maximal Voluntary Extension of the Legs, Acta Physiologica Scandinavica 103 (1978):
456-62; and N. H. Secher, N. Rube, and J. Ellers, Strength of Two- and One- Leg
Extension in Man, Acta Physiologica Scandinavica 134 (1988): 333-39.
96

45
most people, the bilateral deficit during slow contractions is less than twenty percent,97
but for rapid contractions it has been reported to be as high as twenty-five to forty-five
percent.98 Interestingly enough, bilateral deficit can be obviated with training.99 For
example, individuals who participate in training that requires concurrent activation of
homologous muscles with intense contractions but not other types of training, rowers and
weightlifters, for example, have been observed to exhibit a bilateral facilitation rather
than a bilateral deficit.100 In these subjects, the maximum force a muscle can exert occurs
during a bilateral rather than a unilateral contraction.
The Fingers and Thumb
Finger Independence
While humans seem to demonstrate significant independence amongst the digits
in daily activities, they apparently lack the ability to move the fingers completely
See J. D. Howard and R. M. Enoka, Maximum Bilateral Contractions are
Modified by Neurally Mediated Interlimb Effects, Journal of Applied Physiology 70
(1991): 306-16 and T. J. Koh, M. D. Grabiner, and C. A. Clough, Bilateral Deficit is
Larger for Step Than for Ramp Isometric Contractions, Journal of Applied Physiology
74(3) (1993): 1200-5.
97

See Koh, Grabiner, and Clough, Bilateral Deficit, 1200-5 and A. A.


Vandervoort, D. G. Sale, and J. Moro, Comparison of Motor Unit Activation During
Unilateral and Bilateral Leg Extension, Journal of Applied Physiology 56 (1984): 4651.
98

N. Rube and N. H. Secher, Effect of Training on Central Factors in Fatigue


Following Two- and One-Leg Static Exercise in Man, Acta Physiologica Scandinavica
141 (1990): 87-95.
99

See Howard and Enoka, Maximum Bilateral Contractions, 306-16 and N. H.


Secher, Isometric Rowing Strength of Experienced and Inexperienced Oarsmen,
Medicine and Science in Sports 7 (1975): 280-3.
100

46
independently. For example, studies by Schieber, Hger-Ross and Schieber, and Lang
and Schieber have shown that primates and humans are unable to voluntarily flex one
finger without incurring movement of the other fingers as well.101 This phenomenon has
been referred to as enslavement. It appears that the degree to which one finger is
enslaved to another is influenced by whether the finger is the index, middle, ring, or little
finger and the speed with which a particular movement is performed. Hger-Ross and
Schieber have shown that the index finger is more independent than the other fingers,
followed by the little, middle, and ring fingers, respectively, and that movements
performed with greater speed tend to be less individuated than those performed more
slowly.102 Perhaps surprisingly, it appears that hand dominance is not a significant factor
affecting finger independence as research by Reilly has shown no difference between the
individuation of the digits on the preferred and non-preferred hands during force
production with single digits in isolation.103 The question then arises as to how neural and
motor organization may impact the human ability to move the fingers and whether or not
See Marc H. Schieber, Individuated Finger Movements of Rhesus Monkeys:
A Means of Quantifying the Independence of the Digits, Journal of Neurophysiology 65
(1991): 1381-91 and C. Hger-Ross and M. H. Schieber, Quantifying the Independence
of Human Finger Movements: Comparisons of Digits, Hands, and Movement
Frequencies, Journal of Neuroscience 20(22) (2000): 8542-50; and Catherine Lang and
Marc H. Schieber, Differential Impairment of Individuated Finger Movements in
Humans After Damage to the Motor Cortex or the Corticospinal Tract, Journal of
Neurophysiology 90 (2003): 1160-70.
101

Hger-Ross and Schieber, Quantifying the Independence, 8542-50.

102

K. T. Reilly, M. A. Nordstrom, and M. H. Schieber, Short-Term


Synchronization Between Motor Units in Different Functional Subdivisions of the
Human Flexor Digitorum Profundus Muscle, Journal of Neurophysiology 92 (2004):
734-42.
103

47
the ability might be amenable to adaptation or learning. Chiang, Slobounov, and Ray
have suggested that finger control is not hard-wired but instead plastic and influenced by
deliberate practice,104 a position supported by that fact that musicians demonstrate greater
independence of the digits than non-musicians.105 While significant debate exists as to
the mechanisms underlying finger independence, it is thought that, through practice,
central control of movement of the fingers may be differentially developed in musicians
in comparison with non-musicians who perhaps have less opportunity to practice
individualized movements.106
The Thumb
While at least one study suggests that the thumb is treated, not as a special digit,
but as another finger by the nervous system,107 there are several anatomical and
physiological reasons why the thumb has often been considered separate from the fingers.
Most obviously, the thumb is capable of rotary and three-dimensional movement while
movements of the other four digits involve primarily flexion and extension.
Anatomically, the thumbs expanded metacarpal head and three additional muscles add

Chiang et al., Practice-Related Modulations, 1033-43.

104

Slobounov et al., Modulated Cortical Control, 2013-24.

105

Ibid.

106

Halla Olafsdottir, Vladimir M. Zatsiorsky, and Mark L. Latash, Is the Thumb


a Fifth Finger? A Study of Digit Interaction During Force Production Tasks,
Experimental Brain Research 160 (2005): 203-13.
107

48
strength and refined motor control to its movements108 while lacking the multi-digit,
multi-tendon muscles that are involved in finger action.109
The structure of the thumb has evolved from non-human primates to humans,110
and its development has apparent ramifications in the brain as well. One study in
particular has demonstrated that the representations of the thumb in the brain are very
large and disparate from those of the fingers111 although recent work by Schieber
challenges these results. 112 Patterns of brain activation involving the thumb also appear to
be different than those involving the fingers. Two separate studies have shown that
sensorimotor processing in the primary motor cortex and somatosensory cortices is
different for the thumb and middle finger, an observation which is thought to indicate that
specific somatosensory processing for the thumb may provide information for the motor

R. L. Susman, Fossil Evidence for Early Hominid Tool Use, Science 265
(1994): 1570-3.
108

K. L. Moore and A. F. Dalley, The Upper Limb, in Clinically Oriented


Anatomy, 5th ed. (Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2006), 726-885.
109

See J. Napier, The Evolution of the Hand, Scientific American 207 (1962): 5662; Susman, Fossil Evidence, 1570-3; and Idem, Hand Function and Tool Behavior in
Early Hominids, Journal of Human Evolution 35 (1998): 23-46.
110

W. Penfield and E. Boldrey, Somatic Motor and Sensory Representation in the


Cerebral Cortex of Man as Studied by Electrical Stimulation, Brain 60 (1937): 389-443.
111

M. H. Schieber, Constraints on Somatotopic Organization in the Primary


Motor Cortex, Journal of Neurophysiology 86 (2001): 2125-43.
112

49
cortex for fine motor control.113 Furthermore, Hamada has shown differences in patterns
of cortical activation during movements of the thumb and index finger suggesting that
sensory information from the index finger is processed more bilaterally than from the
thumb.114
Pianists and Hand Physiology
Knowledge of hand physiology is pertinent to pianists for several reasons. First, a
basic understanding of muscles in the wrist and fingers encourages conscious choices in
hand and wrist position which in turn facilitate ease and variety of movement.
Furthermore, it is possible to train muscles and to therefore alter some of the properties
they exhibit including behavioral characteristics. This is significant since, due to the
demands of piano playing, pianists require muscles that are capable of contracting
quickly but that are also resistant to fatigue.
Quite interestingly, there appear to be some similarities and yet some differences
in the way the thumb and fingers are treated by the nervous system. Not only do the
thumb and fingers differ in their structure, but it is also apparent that patterns of brain
activation involving them are also somewhat different. Because of these differences,
particular attention should be given to the development of the thumb as well as the
fingers.
See Masato Tanosaki et al., Specific Somatosensory Processing in
Somatosensory Area 3b for Human Thumb: A Neuromagnetic Study, Clinical
Neurophysiology 112 (2001): 1516-22 and J. Jarvelainen and M. Schurmann, The
Motor Cortex Approximately 20 Hz Rhythm Reacts Differently to Thumb and Middle
Finger Stimulation: An MEG Study, NeuroReport 13 (2002): 1243-46.
113

Y. Hamada, et al., Different Laterality Between the Thumb and Index Finger in
Human SII Activities, NeuroReport 11 (2000): 3603-06.
114

50
It is clear that musicians demonstrate neural as well as muscular adaptations in
their abilities to grade force and move the fingers independently. Evidence
demonstrating training-induced adaptations in muscle has shown that results are
dependent upon the duration, intensity, frequency, and the type of training program used.
The implications for pianists suggest specificity in how one practices, what one practices,
and the results one desires.

51
CHAPTER 4
SKILL ACQUISITION: SENSORIMOTOR LEARNING
Human beings interact with their environment via their motor repertoire, but
changes in a persons environment, body, or task require motor learning to facilitate
corresponding changes in motor performance. Some of the changes experienced by
humans are a result of physical maturation or disease, but others are associated with the
desire to learn new skills. In order to optimize strategies of learning, theorists and
researchers continue to study the acquisition and development of skills, topics that have
attracted their interest since the beginnings of modern psychology.
With regard to motor learning, musicians are a particularly unique population
since their training is largely devoted, not to the development of strength or endurance,
but to skill acquisition resulting in technical facility, coordination, and artistic control.
Based upon current research and information regarding processes involved in motor
learning, numerous parameters of pianists training have the potential to influence their
learning and performance.
Feedback
Feedback refers to information used for motor control and learning.115 Despite
differences amongst several theories of learning, there is general agreement that motor
learning appears to be strongly facilitated by the availability of feedback during

R. A. Schmidt and T. D. Lee, Motor Control and Learning: A Behavioral


Emphasis, 3rd ed. (Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 1999).
115

52
learning.116 Salmoni, Schmidt, and Walter, for example, suggest that information
provided by the sense organsusually termed feedback is almost without dispute
considered critical for learning new motor actions.117
Stages of Learning, Specificity of Practice, and Feedback
Debate continues as to the degree to which feedback is used during skill
acquisition.118 Two theories have emerged, however. One view highlights the
importance of feedback during early stages of motor learning and suggests that, with
practice, gradual online, feedback-based control diminishes.119 Specifically, proponents
of this view suggest that motor skill progresses from an initial stage, in which slow
performance is under close sensory guidance, through an intermediate stage to an
advanced stage in which movements may be rapid and automated.
The other theory concerns the specificity of practice and suggests that
performance is specific to the sources of afferent information available during practice.120
See J. A. Adams, A Closed-Loop Theory of Motor Learning, Journal of
Motor Behavior 9 (1971): 111-150; I. M. Bilodeau, Information Feedback, in
Acquisition of Skill, ed. E. A. Bilodeau (New York: Academic Press, 1966), 255-96; and
R. A. Schmidt, A Schema Theory of Discrete Motor Skill Learning, Psychological
Review 82 (1975): 225-60.
116

Alan W. Salmoni et al., Knowledge of Results and Motor Learning: A Review


and Critical Reappraisal, Psychological Bulletin 95(3) (1984): 356.
117

Olave Krigolson and Geraldine Van Gyn, Is There Feedback During Visual
Imagery? Evidence From a Specificity of Practice Paradigm, Canadian Journal of
Experimental Psychology 60(1) (2006): 24-32.
118

R. W. Pew, Acquisition of Hierarchical Control Over the Temporal


Organization of a Skill, Journal of Experimental Psychology 71(5) (1966): 764-71.
119

See E. J. Gibson, Principles of Perceptual Learning and Development (New

120

53
In other words, a persons skill in a transfer condition will be affected by the degree to
which feedback in the acquisition and transfer conditions is similar.121 For example,
regarding musicians who intend to perform from memory, the specificity of practice
hypothesis suggests that they will be most successful if also practicing from memory.
Furthermore, if one has practiced from memory but performs with music, performance
will likely be disrupted.
Auditory Feedback
Feedback in music learning and performance is of several types: tactile;
proprioceptive; visual regarding hand position, etc.; visual as it may relate to reading
notation; and auditory. What impact does auditory feedback have on motor
performance? Early attempts to address the question suggest that altered auditory
feedback disrupts feedback control of sequence production.122 However, it is apparent

York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1969); L. Proteau et al., On the Type of Information


Used to Control and Learn an Aiming Movement after Moderate and Extensive Practice,
Human Movement Science 6 (1987): 181-9; L. Proteau and J. Cournoyer, Vision of the
Stylus in a Manual Aiming Task: The Effects of Practice, Quarterly Journal of
Experimental Psychology 42A (1990): 811-28; and L. Proteau et al., A Sensorimotor
Basis for Motor Learning: Evidence Indicating Specificity of Practice, The Quarterly
Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A 44(3) (1992): 557-75.
See J. A. Adams, D. Gopher, and G. Lintern, Effects of Visual and
Proprioceptive Feedback on Motor Learning, Journal of Motor Behavior 9 (1977): 1122; D. Elliot, and M. Jaeger, Practice and the Visual Control of Manual Aiming
Movements, Journal of Human Movement Studies, 14, (1988): 279-91; Proteau and
Cournoyer, Vision of the Stylus in a Manual Aiming Task, 811-28; and Proteau,
Marteniuk, and Lvesque, A Sensorimotor Basis for Motor Learning, 557-75.
121

See J. W. Black, The Effect of Delayed Side-Tone Upon Vocal Rate and
Intensity, Journal of Speech & Hearing Disorders 16 (1951): 56-60; R. A. Chase, An
Information-Flow Model of the Organization of Motor Activity. I: Transduction,
Transmission and Central Control of Sensory Information, Journal of Nervous & Mental
122

54
from studies involving speech that many, but not all, alterations of auditory feedback
disrupt performance.123 Finney124 and Pfordresher125 provided evidence that some
alterations of auditory feedback fail to disrupt music performance while several studies
have demonstrated that performance often proceeds unhindered despite the absence of
feedback. While discussion continues, Finney and Palmer suggest that, even if sound is
not necessary for an adequate level of performance in music, it might be important for
learning or recall.126 Repp also explicitly makes the claim that auditory feedback is
important for music learning.127

Disease 140 (1965): 239-51; F. Fairbanks, Systematic Research in Experimental


Phonetics: 1. A Theory of the Speech Mechanism as a Servosystem, Journal of Speech
and Hearing Disorders 19 (1954): 133-39; G. Fairbanks and N. Guttman, Effects of
Delayed Auditory Feedback Upon Articulation, Journal of Speech & Hearing Research
1 (1958): 12-22; and B. S. Lee, Some Effects of Side-Tone Delay, Journal of the
Acoustical Society of America 22 (1950): 639-40.
G. J. Borden, An Interpretation of Research on Feedback Interruption in
Speech, Brain & Language 7 (1979): 307-19.
123

S. A. Finney, Auditory Feedback and Musical Keyboard Performance, Music


Perception 15 (1997): 153-74.
124

P. Q. Pfordresher, Auditory Feedback in Music Performance: The Role of


Melodic Structure and Musical Skill, Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human
Perception & Performance 29 (2005): 1331-45.
125

Steven A. Finney, and Caroline Palmer, Auditory Feedback and Memory for
Music Performance: Sound Evidence for an Encoding Effect, Memory & Cognition
31(1) (2003): 51-64.
126

Bruno Repp, Effects of Auditory Feedback Deprivation on Expressive Piano


Performance, Music Perception 16(4) (1999): 409-38.
127

55
Visual Feedback
Previous research has suggested that proprioceptive and visual feedback
indicating the initial location of limbs is critical to facilitating accurate planning of
movements.128 To determine how visual and proprioceptive information is combined in
perception, scientists often employ distortion techniques to dissociate the usually
corresponding relationship between vision and proprioception. Under these conditions
which involve either optical prisms or virtual reality environments, subjects perceive their
hand to be in a location in between those specified by either vision or proprioception.129

See M. Favilla, W. Hening, and C. Ghez, Trajectory Control in Targeted Force


Impulses. VI. Independent Specification of Response Amplitude and Direction,
Experimental Brain Research 75 (1989): 280-94; C. Ghez, W. Hening, and J. Gordon,
Organization of Voluntary Movement, Current Opinion in Neurobiology 1 (1991):
664-71; C. Ghez et al., Discrete and Continuous Planning of Hand Movements and
Isometric Force Trajectories, Experimental Brain Research 115 (1997): 217-33; J.
Gordon and C. Ghez, Trajectory Control in Targeted Force Impulses. II. Pulse Height
Control, Experimental Brain Research 67 (1987a): 241-52; Idem, Trajectory Control
in Targeted Force Impulses. III. Compensatory Adjustments for Initial Errors,
Experimental Brain Research 67 (1987b): 253-69; J. Gordon et al., Accuracy of Planar
Reaching Movements. II. Systematic Extent Errors Resulting from Inertial Anisotropy,
Experimental Brain Research 99 (1994a): 112-30; D. A. Rosenbaum, Human
Movement Initiation: Specification of Arm, Direction, and Extent, Journal of
Experimental Psychology. General 109 (1980): 444-74; and Y. Rossetti, M. Desmerget,
and C. Problanc, Vectorial Coding of Movement: Vision, Proprioception, or Both?
Journal of Neurophysiology 74 (1995): 457-63.
128

See C. S. Harris, Perceptual Adaptation to Inverted, Reversed, and Displaced


Vision, Psychological Review 72 (1965): 419-44; J. C. Hay, H. L. Pick, and K. Ikeda,
Visual Capture Produced by Prism Spectacles, Psychonomic Science 2 (1965): 215-6;
H. L. Pick, D. H. Warren, and J. C. Hay, Sensory Conflict in Judgments of Spatial
Direction, Perception and Psychophysics 6 (1969): 203-5; R. J. Van Beers et al., How
Humans Combine Simultaneous Proprioceptive and Visual Position Information,
Experimental Brain Research 111 (1996): 253-61; Idem, Integration of Proprioceptive
and Visual Position-Information: An Experimentally Supported Model, Journal of
Neurophysiology 81 (1999): 1355-64; D. H. Warren, Response Factors in Intermodality
Localization Under Conflict Conditions, Perception and Psychophysics 27 (1980): 28129

56
Most of these studies have indicated that subjects perceive a hand position that is biased
toward the position indicated by vision. This evidence suggests that, at least in some
circumstances, visual feedback is a very important if not somewhat dominant source of
afferent information.
Multi-Sensory Integration
It has been suggested that different types of representations built from reading
music are based on complex relevant visual patterns, explicit knowledge of musical
structure,130 rules governing music perception in the auditory modality, or the likely coexistence and interaction of such representations.131 While musicians are intimately
familiar with auditory imagery, prior to recent use of functional imaging techniques, it
has been difficult for the scientific community to substantiate the presence of this internal
phenomenon. Recent research by Schn and Besson substantiates the likelihood that
musicians have an auditory-like representation of the written music before they play it
and suggests that, while visuomotor coding may be sufficient to play written notes, an
anticipated auditory representation of written music is important for an expressive
performance that assigns different significance to each note based upon its structural
32; and D. H. Warren and W. T. Cleaves, Visual-Proprioceptive Interaction Under
Large Amounts of Conflict, Journal of Experimental Psychology 90 (1971): 206-14.
Daniele Schn and Mireille Besson, Visually Induced Auditory Expectancy in
Music Reading: A Behavioral and Electrophysiological Study, Journal of Cognitive
Neuroscience 17(4) (April 2005): 694-705.
130

See Idem, Processing Pitch and Duration in Music Reading: A RT-ERP


Study, Neuropsychologia 40 (2002a): 868-78 and D. Schn, C. Semenza, and G. Denes,
Naming of Musical Notes: A Selective Deficit in One Musical Clef, Cortex 37 (2001):
407-21.
131

57
function.132 This hypothesis, that written music may induce both musical auditory
expectancy and motor expectancy, may in fact influence the way music is perceived by
performers and audiences.
Audio-Motor Coupling
Playing a musical instrument places great demands upon the human motor and
auditory systems due to the speed and accuracy required in the coordination of
movements and the necessary ability to perceive fine nuances aurally.133 Musicians
demonstrate high-level function of both the motor and auditory systems and plasticity of
the auditory and motor cortices as well.134 Not only have researchers been interested in
the function and plasticity of these systems individually but in the likely interaction of the
two systems as well.
As utilized by Baumann et al. and other scientists, the term transmodal refers
both to activity in the motor cortex elicited by auditory stimulation and to activity in the
auditory cortex elicited by movements.135 It is significant that Whiteside made reference
to just such a relationship. The player is told often enough that listening to oneself is the

Schn and Besson, Visually Induced Auditory Expectancy, 694-705.

132

Simon Baumann et al., A Network for Audio-Motor Coordination in Skilled


Pianists and Non-Musicians, Brain Research 1161 (2007): 65-78.
133

See T. F. Mnte, E. Altenmller, and L. Jncke, The Musicians Brain as a


Model of Neuroplasticity, Nature Reviews. Neuroscience 3 (2002): 473-8 and G.
Schlaug, The Brain of Musicians: A Model for Functional and Structural Adaptation,
Biological Foundations of Music 930 (2001): 281-99.
134

Baumann et al., Audio-Motor Coordination, 67.

135

58
important thing in practice and performance. But he should be told more often that the
physical action of the performer conditions his listening.136 Furthermore, she highlighted
the importance of improvisation because of such a relationship between the auditory and
motor areas. Improvisation was another of her prime tools. It was used with two goals
in mind: involving the ear and creating a basic rhythm in the student. . . . The improviser
does not strike one note and then stop to decide what note to play next. From the
standpoint of the ear, improvisation establishes the most immediate relationship between
what the ear images and the playing mechanism performs.137
Evidence for transmodal activity was first based on the language processing
studies of Aboitiz and Garcia138 and the research of Watkins and Paus139 and Watkins et
al. 140 involving speech perception. Studies in speech production by Doupe and Kuhl141
and Hickok and Poeppel were also significant.142 These studies involving language

Whiteside, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 157.

136

Ibid., 23.

137

F. Aboitiz and R. Garcia, The Anatomy of Language Revisited, Biological


Research 30(4) (1997): 171-83.
138

K. Watkins and T. Paus, Modulation of Motor Excitability During Speech


Perception: The Role of Brocas Area, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 16(6) (2004):
978-87.
139

K. E. Watkins, A. P. Strafella, and T. Paus, Seeing and Hearing Speech Excites


the Motor System Involved in Speech Production, Neuropsychologia 41(8) (2003): 98994.
141
A. J. Doupe and P. K. Kuhl, Birdsong and Human Speech: Common Themes
and Mechanisms, Annual Review of Neuroscience 22 (1999): 567-31.
140

59
provided the groundwork for research investigating brain activity in motor performance
in music.143 Studies by Bangert, Haeusler, and Altenmller,144 Bangert and Altenmller,145
Bangert et al.,146 and Baumann et al.147 have since focused upon the interaction of the two
modalities.
With regard to piano practice, Bangert et al. concluded that after practice,
cortical auditory and sensorimotor hand areas are jointly activated for purely auditory as
well as for mute motor tasks. Furthermore the degree of similarity [in activation]
correlates to the accumulated practice time.148 Classen et al. found that corepresentation
of the areas is established during the first few minutes of training and is consolidated

G. Hickok and D. Poeppel, Dorsal and Ventral Streams: A Framework for


Understanding Aspects of the Functional Anatomy of Language, Cognition 92 (2004):
131-8.
142

See M. Lotze et al., The Musicians Brain: Functional Imaging of Amateurs


and Professionals During Performance and Imagery, NeuroImage 20 (2003): 1817-29
and I. G. Meister et al., Playing Piano in the MindAn fMRI Study on Music Imagery
and Performance in Pianists, Cognitive Brain Research 19 (2004): 219-28.
143

M. Bangert, U. Haeusler, and E. O. Altenmller, On Practice: How the Brain


Connects Piano Keys and Piano Sounds, Biological Foundations of Music 930 (2001):
425-8.
144

M. Bangert and E. O. Altenmller, Mapping Perception to Action in Piano


Practice: A Longitudinal DC-EEG Study, BMC Neuroscience 4 (2003),
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2202/4/26.
145

Bangert et al., Shared Networks for Auditory and Motor Processing in


Professional Pianists, 917-26.
146

Baumann et al., A Network for Audio-Motor Coordination, 65-78.

147

Bangert, Haeusler, and Altenmller, On Practice, 427.

148

60
within weeks. Furthermore, the researchers hypothesized that this process may provide
the basis for further skill achievement.149
The aforementioned sensorimotor corepresentation appears to be largely
automatized and, perhaps surprisingly, can be activated preattentively.150 Haueisen and
Knsche demonstrated that pianists listening to well-studied piano music exhibit
unconscious contralateral primary motor cortical activity which demonstrates that
information transfer from the auditory to motor system has, at the very least, an
involuntary component.151
Transmodal activity is observed in non-musicians as well as musicians. Lahav et
al.152 have demonstrated that non-musicians are capable of forming audio-motor
interactions with training, and it is thought that the previous existence of an audio-motor
network is probably crucial for fast formation of interactions.153 Not surprising
therefore, is what appears to be a strong overlap in audio-motor networks associated with

J. Classen et al., Rapid Plasticity of Human Cortical Movement


Representation Induced by Practice, Journal of Neurophysiology 79 (1998): 1117-23.
149

S. Koelsch, E. Schroger, and M. Tervaniemi, Superior Pre-Attentive Auditory


Processing in Musicians, Neuroreport 10 (1999): 1309-13.
150

J. Haueisen and T. R. Knsche, Involuntary Motor Activity in Pianists


Evoked by Music Perception, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 13(6) (2001): 786-92.
151

A. Lahav et al., The Power of Listening: Auditory-Motor Interactions in


Musical Training, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1060 (2005): 189-94.
152

Baumann et al., A Network for Audio-Motor Coordination, 73.

153

61
language tasks and musical tasks. 154 Furthermore, Speech, song and instrumental music
performance have in common that feedback processes and an anticipation of the
produced sound play an important role in all of them.155
Although non-musicians demonstrate transmodal activity with training, it is
significant that pianists seem to demonstrate significantly stronger transmodal activity in
the motor part of the network associated with music listening than non-musicians. For
example, Baumann et al. recorded greater activity in the lateral dorsal premotor cortex
and the pre-supplementary motor cortex which suggested an increased motor
representation for piano sound in pianists. These results further suggest that an
intermodal transformation network of auditory and motor areas is subject to plasticity as
a result of intensive training.156
Mirror Neurons
The notion that actions might be intrinsically linked to perception was first
proposed in 1890 by William James who suggested that every mental representation of a
movement awakens to some degree the actual movement which is its object.157 The
implication is that observing, imagining, preparing, or in any way representing an action

Ibid.

154

Ibid.

155

Ibid., 65-78.

156

W. James, Principles of Physiology (New York: Holt, 1980), 293.

157

62
excites the motor program used to execute the same action.158 Developmental
psychologists have long accepted the idea of observational learning, or modeling, on the
belief that it is largely responsible for acquisition of language and social skills in
children. Modeling and motor skill acquisition has also been an important topic in
physical education.
According to Bandura, an observer obtains a cognitive representation of an
action from a models performance.159 Although the cognitive representation may be
incomplete because important dimensions of the movement such as pressure and
muscular tension are internal and not available to be observed,160 Adams has
demonstrated that the timing of the segments of a movement sequence can be learned by
observation.161 Observational learning, which incorporates viewing the models response
to the activity and the observers understanding or knowledge of results regarding the
activity, facilitates formation of a cognitive representation. Furthermore, Prinz has
demonstrated that when an observer sees a motor event that shares features with a similar
motor event in his or her own motor repertoire, he or she is primed to repeat it. The
See M. Jeannerod, The Representing Brain. Neural Correlates of Motor
Intention and Imagery, Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (1994): 187-245 and W. Prinz,
Perception and Action Planning, European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 9 (1997):
129-54.
158

A. Bandura, ed., Psychological Modeling (New York: Lieber-Atherton, 1971).

159

J. A. Adams, Learning of Movement Sequences, Psychological Bulletin 96


(1984): 3-28.
160

Idem, Use of the Models Knowledge of Results to Increase the Observers


Performance, Journal of Human Movement Studies 12 (1986): 89-98.
161

63
greater the similarity between the observed event and the motor event, the stronger the
priming is.162 Growing interest in the area has led to the discovery of mirror neurons and
a mirror neuron system.
Mirror neurons are a particular class of visuomotor neurons originally discovered
in area F5 of the monkey premotor cortex. These neurons discharge both when the
monkey performs a particular action and when it observes another individual performing
a similar action.163 It has been suggested that the functional role of mirror neurons is twofold. First, mirror neuron activity mediates imitation.164 Second, mirror neurons appear
to provide the basis for understanding an action.165 Kohler et al. have provided evidence
for the latter in demonstrating that F5 mirror neurons are able to recognize actions from
their sound.166 The researchers recorded F5 mirror neuron activity both while a monkey
was observing a noisy action, such as ripping a piece of paper, and while presenting the
same noise without observing the associated action. Results indicated that approximately
Prinz, Perception and Action Planning, 129-54.

162

See G. di Pellegrino et al., Understanding Motor Events: A Neurophysiological


Study, Experimental Brain Research 91 (1992): 176-80; V. L. Gallese et al., Action
Recognition in the Premotor Cortex, Brain 119 (1996): 593-609; and G. Rizzolatti et al.,
Premotor Cortex and the Recognition of Motor Actions, Cognitive Brain Research 3
(1996a): 131-41.
163

Jeannerod, The Representing Brain, 187-245.

164

G. Rizzolatti, L. Fogassi, and V. Gallese, Neurophysiological Mechanisms


Underlying the Understanding and Imitation of Action, Nature Reviews. Neuroscience
2(9) (2001): 661-70.
165

Evelyne Kohler et al., Hearing Sounds, Understanding Actions: Action


Representation in Mirror Neurons, Science 297(5582) (2002): 846-8.
166

64
fifteen percent of mirror neurons responsive to presentation of the action and sound also
responded to presentation of the sound by itself. The neurons that responded specifically
to the sounds of actions were called audio-visual mirror neurons.
Evidence for a mirror neuron system has recently been extended to humans with
studies indicating that mirror regions are activated when human subjects imitate or
imagine an action. Filimon et al. have used fMRI to compare human cortical activations
for executed, observed, and imagined reaching with the goal of identifying a mirror
neuron system that represents reaching and reaching-related behaviors.167 Significantly,
results suggest that such a mirror neuron system does exist and that it is both different
from and similar to the mirror neuron system underlying grasping movements and object
manipulation. Therefore, it appears that mirror neuron systems are specific to the type of
hand action performed. Results from the same research also demonstrated an overlap
between executed, observed, and imagined reaching activations in the human cortex,
specifically the dorsal premotor cortex as well as the superior parietal lobe and the
intraparietal sulcus. Furthermore, properties of the human mirror neuron system appear
to be neither wholly innate nor final as Catmur, Walsh, and Heyes have recently
demonstrated that these properties may be developed through sensorimotor learning.168

Flavia Filimon et al., Human Cortical Representations for Reaching: Mirror


Neurons for Execution, Observation, and Imagery, NeuroImage 37(4) (2007): 1315-28.
167

C. Catmur, V. Walsh, and C. Heyes, Sensorimotor Learning Configures the


Human Mirror System, Current Biology 17(17) (2007): 1527-31.
168

65
Discovery of audio-visual mirror neurons in monkeys gave rise to the hypothesis
that premotor areas are inherently involved, not only when observing actions, but also
when listening to action-related sound.169 Recent evidence indicates that humans possess
an echo-neuron system, a system that motorically resonates when an individual listens
to verbal material. For example, experiments by Fadiga et al.170 and Watkins et al.171
show activation of speech-related motor centers when an individual listens to verbal
stimuli. Studies by Aziz-Zadeh et al. suggest that, as a person hears and recognizes a
sound, the brain may also simulate the action.172 This might explain how the mirror
neuron system responds to actions and sounds which do not have verbal meaning and
which are well-controlled and newly acquired.
Several researchers have found audiomotor activation patterns within the core
regions of the frontoparietal mirror neuron circuit previously found in humans in a
variety of action-observations tasks.173 Some of these observations involved watching

Amir Lahav, Elliot Saltzman, and Gottfried Schlaug, Action Representation of


Sound: Audiomotor Recognition Network While Listening to Newly Acquired Actions,
The Journal of Neuroscience 27(2) (2007): 308-14.
169

L. Fadiga et al., Speech Listening Specifically Modulates the Excitability of


Tongue Muscles: A TMS Study, European Journal of Neuroscience 15 (2002): 399402.
170

Watkins, Strafella, and Paus, Seeing and Hearing Speech, 989-94.

171

L. Aziz-Zadeh et al., Left Hemisphere Motor Facilitation in Response to


Manual Action Sounds, European Journal of Neuroscience 19 (2004): 2609-12.
172

See J. Grzes, et al., Activations Related to Mirror and Canonical Neurones


in the Human Brain: An fMRI Study, NeuroImage 18 (2003): 928-37; M. Iacoboni et
al., Grasping the Intentions of Others with Ones Own Mirror Neuron System, PLoS
173

66
chord progressions on the guitar174 or finger-playing movements on the piano.175 In
studies involving music performance, it is particularly interesting that the posterior
inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), including Brocas area, was active only when subjects
listened to music they knew how to play. When subjects listened to music they had never
played, auditory activation was dominant since subjects were unable to match the music
with existing action representations. However, Lahav et al. have shown premotor activity
when subjects listened to untrained music comprised of the same notes as learned
music.176 The researchers hypothesized that premotor activity might reflect the ability of
subjects to link some of the notes they heard with corresponding fingers and piano keys.
Other evidence also suggests that mental simulations and operations of the mirror neuron
system might either be functionally related to one another or a form of one another;
further studies are needed to support this hypothesis, however. Furthermore, it has been
suggested that a cross-modal neural system responsible for formally orchestrating mirror

Biol 3(3) (2005): 529-35; and M. Lotze, Differential Cerebral Activation During
Observation of Expressive Gestures and Motor Acts, Neuropsychologia 44 (2006):
1787-95.
G. Buccino, F. Finkofski, and L. Riggio, The Mirror Neuron System and
Action Recognition, Brain and Language 89(2) (2004a): 362-9.
174

B. P. Haslinger et al., Transmodal Sensorimotor Networks During Action


Observation in Professional Pianists, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 17(2) (2005):
282-93.
175

Lahav, Saltzman, and Schlaug, Action Representation of Sound, 308-14.

176

67
neurons might exist in humans.177 A questions then arises as to whether or not mirror
neuron activity is triggered by mental representation of an action.178
Music and Mental Rehearsal
Mental rehearsal incorporates both committing a score to memory and the ability to
create an internalized representation of the sound. With the exception of the primary
motor and sensory areas, many of the other cortical regions that are normally active while
playing are also active during mental rehearsal.179 The effectiveness of mental practice in
improving aspects of the dynamics of movement, such as the accuracy of a movement
trajectory, has also been verified experimentally.180 While the gains achieved by those
undertaking mental rehearsal have not been as significant as those undertaking physical
practice, mental rehearsal is apparently better than no practice.181 Additionally, mental
rehearsal may help to mediate injuries related to overuse.

See Kohler et al., Hearing Sounds, Understanding Actions, 846-8 and C.


Keysers et al., Audiovisual Mirror Neurons and Action Recognition, Experimental
Brain Research 153(4) (2003): 628-36.
177

M. A. Umilt et al., I Know What You Are Doing. A Neurophysiological


Study, Neuron 31(1) (2001): 155-65.
178

See F. J. Langheim et al., Cortical Systems Associated with Covert Music


Rehearsal, NeuroImage 16(4) (2002): 901-8; Lotze et al., The Musicians Brain,
1817-29; and Meister et al., Playing Piano in the Mind, 219-28.
179

L. Ygez et al., A Mental Route to Motor Learning: Improving Trajectorial


Kinematics Through Imagery Training, Behavioural Brain Research 90(1) (1998): 95106.
180

A. Gabrielsson, The Performance of Music, in The Psychology of Music, 2nd


ed., ed. D. Deutsch (San Diego: Academic Press, 1999), 501-602.
181

68
Motor Imagery
Motor imagery has been defined as the covert process of imagining movement of
ones own body (-part) without actually moving that body (-part).182 Motor imagery is
significant since it leads to activation in motor areas of the brain.183 In addition to similar
brain activation, Pascual-Leone et al. demonstrated that motor imagery of finger
movements resulted in the same organizational changes as actual physical practice.184
The scientists studied the effects of mental and physical practice on the learning of a onehanded, five-finger piano exercise and the modulation of the cortical motor areas
targeting muscles involved in the task. Over the course of five days, subjects rehearsed
the sequence either mentally or physically, and both groups showed progressive
improvement. Results showed that the size of the contralateral output map for the long
finger flexor and extensor muscles increased progressively each day as the subjects
practiced the task. The increases in size of the representations were equivalent in both
physical and mental training conditions, but the level of performance in the mentalpractice condition after 5 days was equivalent to that of the physical-practice condition

Sjoerd de Vries and Theo Mulder, Motor Imagery and Stroke Rehabilitation: A
Critical Discussion, Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine 39 (2007): 5-13.
182

See Kristeva et al., Activation of Cortical Areas in Music Execution and


Imagining: A High-resolution EEG Study, NeuroImage 20(3) (2003): 1872-83; Lotze,
The Musicians Brain, 1817-29; and Meister et al., Playing Piano in the Mind, 21928.
183

A. Pascual-Leone et al., Modulation of Muscle Responses Evoked by


Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation During the Acquisition of New Fine Motor Skills,
Journal of Neurophysiology 74 (1995): 1037-45.
184

69
after 3 days. However, after adding 1 physical training session at the end of a period of 5
days of mental practice, subjects reached the same level of performance as those who
were in the physical training group. The scientists interpreted the results as suggesting
that mental practice has a preparatory effect on the task which in turn increases the
efficiency of subsequent physical training.
Studies using positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI) also show that the cortical regions involved in the execution
of a movement are active during motor imagery as well. Using fMRI, Lotze et al. studied
brain activation during executed and imagined movements of the right and left hand
using fMRI and found that the supplementary motor area (SMA), the premotor cortex
(PMC), and the primary motor area (M1) are significantly activated during both actual
and imagined movement.185 The SMA and PMC play a prominent role in the planning,
generation, and execution of more complex motor tasks.186
In addition, although the underlying mechanisms are not yet clear, there is
significant evidence supporting the hypothesis that overt movement, motor imagery, and
observation are essentially based on the same processes.187 Some of the evidence
supporting this is drawn from studies showing that the time to complete an imagined
M. Lotze et al., Activation of Cortical and Cerebellar Motor Areas, 491-501.

185

G. Abbruzzese, C. Trompetto, and M. Schieppati, The Excitability of the


Human Motor Cortex Increases During Execution and Mental Imagination of Sequential
but not Repetitive Finger Movements, Experimental Brain Research 111 (1996): 46572.
186

de Vries and Mulder, Motor Imagery and Stroke Rehabilitation, 5-13.

187

70
movement is similar to the time needed for actual execution of that movement, an
observation that extends to the field of music as well. Two studies displayed a great deal
of correlation in the times that it took string players to perform pieces and to imagine
performances of the pieces.188
Visual Imagery
Practice through use of visual imagery has been shown to benefit acquisition and
performance of motor skills.189 This phenomenon is supported by behavioral,
neuropsychological, and neuroimaging studies demonstrating that visual images and
perceived stimuli recruit the same temporal and occipital brain areas necessary for visual
perception.190 When utilizing visual imagery in practice, subjects experienced imagined
visual feedback similar to the visual feedback available during physical practice.191

Langheim et al., Covert Music Rehearsal, 901-8.

188

See M. U. Lejeune, C. Decker, and X. Sanchez, Mental Rehearsal in Table


Tennis Performance, Perceptual and Motor Skills 79(1) (1994): 627-41; W. G. Meacci
and D. L. Pastore, The Effects of Occluded Vision and Imagery on Putting Golf Balls,
Perceptual and Motor Skills 80(1): 179-86; D. W. Mendoza and H. Wichman, Inner
Dart: Effects of Mental Practice on Performance of Dart Throwing, Perceptual and
Motor Skills 47 (1978): 1195-99; R. Noel, The Effect of Visuo-Motor Behavioural
Rehearsal of Tennis Performance, Journal of Sport Psychology 2 (1980): 221-6; PascualLeone, Modulation of Muscle Responses, 1037-45; and G. Yue and K. J. Cole,
Strength Increases From the Motor Program: Comparison of Training with Maximum
Voluntary and Imagined Muscle Contractions, Journal of Neurophysiology 67 (1992):
1114-23.
190
See M. J. Farah, The Neural Bases of Mental Imagery, in The New Cognitive
Neurosciences, ed. M. S. Gazzaniga (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2000), 965-74 and S.
M. Kosslyn and W. L. Thompson, Shared Mechanisms in Visual Imagery and Visual
Perception: Insights from Cognitive Neuroscience, in The New Cognitive
Neurosciences, ed. M. S. Gazzaniga (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2000), 975-85.
189

Krigolson and Van Gyn, Feedback; During Visual Imagery, 24-32.

191

71
Although the benefits of visual imagery have been most significantly associated
with first-person imaging, substantial gain has also been reported as a result of thirdperson observation. Considerable evidence suggests that observation of others actions
and the preparation of ones own actions may lead to a common motor representation.192
Application of practice through use of imagery would therefore extend from lessons,
masterclasses, and concerts in which one observes another to the concert stage where
ones preparation might incorporate imagery.
Musical Imagery
Aleman et al. define musical mental imagery as the ability to hear melodic
sound-sequences with the minds ear in the absence of external stimulation.193 While it
is a common phenomenon amongst musiciansconductors, composers, and performers
for example, it has only been relatively recently with the aid of imaging tools that musical
imagery could be substantiated scientifically. In large part due to the work of Schrman
et al. with magneto-encephalography,194 Halpern and Zatorre195 and Zatorre et al.196 with

M. Jeannerod, The 25th Bartlett Lecture. To Act or Not to Act: Perspectives


on the Representation of Actions, Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 52
(1999): 1-29.
192

A. Aleman et al., Music Training and Mental Imagery Ability,


Neuropsychologia 38 (2000): 1664-8.
193

See M. Schurmann et al., Minds Ear in a Musician: Where and When in the
Brain, NeuroImage 16 (2002): 434-40.
194

A. R. Halpern and R. J. Zatorre, When that Tune Runs Through Your Head: A
PET Investigation of Auditory Imagery for Familiar Melodies, Cerebral Cortex 9
(1999): 697-704.
195

72
positron emission tomography, and Halpern et al.,197 Kraemer et al.,198 and Yoo et al.199
with functional MRI, converging evidence has demonstrated that neural activity in the
auditory cortex can occur in the absence of sound and that the activity is likely mediated
by the experience of imagining music. An fMRI study conducted by Nakada, Fujii,
Suzuki, & Kwee200 and a magnetoencephalography (MEG) study by Schrmann, Raij,
Fujiki, and Hari201 also clearly show audiocortical activity while musical notation is
read.202 Furthermore, despite the fact that musicians are able to remember visuallypresented sequences of musical notes via musical imagery, nonmusicians are not able to
transform visual notation into musical images.203

R. J. Zatorre et al., Hearing in the Minds Ear: A PET Investigation of Musical


Imagery and Perception, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 8 (1996): 29-46.
196

Halpern et al., Behavioral and Neural Correlates of Perceived and Imagined


Musical Timbre, Neuropsychologia 42(9) (2004): 1281-92.
197

D. J. M. Kraemer et al., Musical Imagery: Sound of Silence Activates


Auditory Cortex, Nature 434 (2005): 158.
198

S. S. Yoo, C. U. Lee, and B. G. Choi, Human Brain Mapping of Auditory


Imagery: Event-Related Functional MRI Study, Neuroreport 12(14) (2001): 3045-9.
199

T. Nakada et al., Musical Brain Revealed by High-field (3Tesla) Functional


MRI, NeuroReport 9 (1998): 3853-56.
200

Schurmann et al., Minds Ear in a Musician, 434-40.

201

J. A. Sloboda, review of Language, Music, and Mind, by Diana Raffman, Mind


& Language 9 (1994): 377-85.
202

See Virpi Kalakoski, Effect of Level on Recall of Visually Presented Patterns of


Musical Notes, Scandinavian Journal of Psychology 48 (2007): 87-96; Warren Brodsky
et al., Auditory Imagery from Musical Notation in Expert Musicians, Perception &
Psychophysics 65(4) (2003): 6012-12; and M. Schrmann et al., Minds Ear in a
203

73
Recently, interest has grown in areas related to mental practice, and several
individuals have shown the overall efficacy of mental practice in music performance.204
Recent studies have demonstrated that pianists mental practice with an auditory model
resulted in advantages over mental practice alone205 while it has also been demonstrated
that analytical score study often aided memorization of unfamiliar music.206 It has since
been suggested that analytical study might lead to auditory imagery or motor imagery.207
Several studies have indicated that listening to a performance is effective in learning
unfamiliar music.208 Highben and Palmer demonstrated that pianists with strong aural

Musician: Where and When in the Brain, NeuroImage 16 (2002): 434-40.


D. D. Coffman, Effects of Mental Practice, Physical Practice, and Knowledge
of Results in Piano Performance, Journal of Research in Music Education 38 (1990):
187-96 and S. L. Ross, The Effectiveness of Mental Practice in Improving the
Performance of College Trombonists, Journal of Research in Music Education 33 (1985):
221-30.
204

See S. Lim and L. G. Lippman, Mental Practice and Memorization of Piano


Music, Journal of General Psychology 118 (1991): 21-30 and A. M. Theiler and L. G.
Lippman, Effects of Mental Practice and Modeling on Guitar and Vocal Performance,
Journal of General Psychology 122 (1995): 329-43.
205

G. Rubin-Rabson, The Influence of Analytical Pre-Study in Memorizing Piano


Music, Archives of Psychology 20 (1937): 3-53.
206

S. Lim and L. G. Lippman, Mental Practice and Memorization of Piano


Music, Journal of General Psychology 118 (1991): 21-30.
207

See R. K. Rosenthal, The Relative Effects of Guided Model, Model Only,


Guided Only, and Practice Only on the Accuracy of Advanced Instrumentalists Musical
Performance, Accuracy, Journal of Research in Music Education 32 (1984): 265-73 and
R. K. Rosenthal et al., Effects of Different Practice Conditions on Advanced
Instrumentalists Performance Accuracy, Journal of Research in Music Education 36
(1988): 250-7.
208

74
skills were least affected by the absence of auditory feedback during learning and suggest
that good performance in the absence of feedback could be due to little or no reliance on
that type of feedback, or alternatively, to good imagery skills that allow performers to use
mental practice to fill in for the missing feedback.209 In suggesting the likelihood of
the latter, the scientists note a significant correlation between pianists aural skills
measures and their performance from memory following the absence of auditory
feedback during practice. Furthermore, this conclusion is consistent with earlier studies
demonstrating increased efficacy of mental practice with an auditory model.210
How does a musical image compare to the music itself? Although literature
concerning auditory imagery has not been as prevalent as literature concerning visual
imagery, similar conclusions have been reached in several cases. Because musical
images contain melodic and harmonic information and encode fairly precise information
about tempo and pitch, they apparently possess a sensory quality similar to the experience
of perceiving actual music.211 Furthermore, studies in which subjects demonstrate
recruitment of the secondary auditory cortex as a result of imagining tones in familiar and
Z. Highben and C. Palmer, Effects of Auditory and Motor Mental Practice in
Memorized Piano Performance, Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education
159 (2004): 64.
209

See Lim and Lippman, Mental Practice and Memorization of Piano Music,
21-30; R. K. Rosenthal et al., Effects of Different Practice Conditions, 250-7; and
Theiler and Lippman, Effects of Mental Practice and Modeling, 329-43.
210

See T. L. Hubbard and K. Stoeckig, Musical Imagery: Generation of Tones


and Chords, Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, & Cognition 14
(1988): 656-67 and Idem, The Representation of Pitch in Musical Imagery, in Auditory
Imagery, ed. D. Reisberg (Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, 1992): 199-236.
211

75
unfamiliar melodies suggest that shared substrates exist for auditory perception and
imagery.212
Auditory images also seem to demonstrate perceptual properties in that they
influence perceptual processing of auditory stimuli.213 Farah and Smith used a signal
detection test to show that the intensity threshold for detecting a pure tone in noise was
lower when subjects formed an image of the target tone either before or during the
observation than when subjects formed an image of a different tone.214 The researchers
concluded that forming the mental image drew attention to the appropriate frequency and
therefore facilitated perception. Similar results have been obtained regarding perception
and the timing of events. Wright and Fitzgerald determined that forming an expectancy
of a target tone based on a cue facilitates the tones detection compared to unexpected
occurrences of the target tone.215 Furthermore, it is apparent that musical training affects
perception of auditory stimuli. Janata and Paroo observed significant correlations

See Zatorre et al., Hearing in the Minds Ear, 29-46; Halpern and Zatorre,
When that Tune Runs Through Your Head, 697-704; Kraemer et al., Sound of
Silence, 158; P. Janata, Brain Electrical Activity Evoked by Mental Formation of
Auditory Expectations and Images, Brain Topography 13 (2001a): 169-93; and Idem,
Neurophysiological Measurements Underlying Auditory Image Formation in Music, in
Musical Imagery, ed. R. I. Godoy and H. Jorgensen (Lisse, The Netherlands: Swets &
Zeitlinger), 27-41.
212

Petr Janata and Kaivon Paroo, Acuity of Auditory Images in Pitch and Time,
Perception & Psychophysics 68(5) (2006): 829-44.
213

M. J. Farah and A. F. Smith, Perceptual Interference and Facilitation with


Auditory Imagery, Perception & Psychophysics 33 (1983): 475-8.
214

B. Z. Wright and M. B. Fitzgerald, The Time Course of Attention in a Simple


Auditory Detection Task, Perception & Psychophysics 66 (2004): 508-16.
215

76
between the amount of musical training and image thresholds with regard to both
intonation and context membership tasks such that greater musical training resulted in
more finely tuned images.216
Imagery, Performance, and Brain Activity
With the exception of the primary motor cortex, it has been demonstrated that
essentially the same cortical regions are activated in imagining and performance
activities.217 It is particularly interesting therefore that Parsons et al. have demonstrated
that performing scales and J.S. Bachs Italian Concerto in F Major (BWV 971) from
memory elicit different patterns of brain activation.218 Performance of scales and the
concerto activated many of the same areas of the brain, but distinct areas of the brain
were also active in each condition and can be linked to specific functions regarding
performance of the particular task. Furthermore, the scientists observed a significant
amount of deactivation throughout the brain, particularly during performance of the
Bach. While differences in attention may account for some of the differences in brain
activation, it may not be the only factor. Furthermore, the results of this research seem to
Janata and Paroo, Acuity of Auditory Images, 829-44.

216

See E. Gerardin et al., Partially Overlapping Neural Networks for Real and
Imagined Hand Movements, Cerebral Cortex 10 (2000): 1093-1104; M. Lotze et al.,
Activation of Cortical and Cerebellar Motor Areas During Executed and Imagined Hand
Movements: An fMRI Study, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 11 (1999): 491-501;
and C. A. Porro et al., Primary Motor and Sensory Cortex Activation During Motor
Performance and Motor Imagery: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study,
Journal of Neuroscience 16 (1996) 7688-98.
217

Lawrence M. Parsons, et al., The Brain Basis of Piano Performance,


Neuropsychologia 43 (2005): 199-215.
218

77
indicate that the human body is differentially involved in performing distinct musical
activities.
Attention
Many factors interact and contribute to the performance of a well-learned skill:
knowledge structures,219 memory capacities,220 problem-solving abilities,221 individual
differences,222 and attentional mechanisms supporting skill execution.223 Attentional
mechanisms incorporate the manner in which experienced performers allocate attention
to skill processes and procedures as actual skill execution unfolds, as well as differences

M. T. Chi, P. J. Feltovich, and R. Glaser, Categorization and Representation of


Physics Problems by Experts and Novices, Cognitive Science 5 (1981): 121-52.
219

See W. G. Chase and H. A. Simon, Perception in Chess, Cognitive Psychology


4 (1973): 55-81; A. de Groot, Thought and Choice in Chess (The Hague, the
Netherlands: Mouton, 1978); and J. L. Starkes, and J. Deakin, Perception in Sport: A
Cognitive Approach to Skilled Performance, in Cognitive Sport Psychology, eds. W. F.
Straub & J. M. Williams (Lansing, MI: Sport Science Associates, 1984), 115-28.
220

See Priest and Lindsay, New Light on Novice-Expert Differences, 389-405


and Tenenbaum and Bar-Eli, Decision-Making in Sport, 171-92.
221

See P. L. Ackerman, Individual Differences in Skill Learning: An Integration of


Psychometric and Information Processing Perspectives, Psychological Bulletin 102
(1987): 3-27; P. L. Ackerman and A. T. Cianciolo, Cognitive, Perceptual-Speed, and
Psychomotor Determinants of Individual Differences During Skill Acquisition, Journal
of Experimental Psychology: Applied 6 (2000): 259-90; and R. Kanfer and P. L.
Ackerman, Motivation and Cognitive Abilities: An Integrative/AptitudeTreatment
Interaction Approach to Skill Acquisition, Journal of Applied Psychology 74 (1989):
657-90.
222

Beilock et al., When Paying Attention Becomes Counterproductive, 6-16.

223

78
in the attentional requirements of low- and high-level performances.224 Knowledge of
attentional mechanisms in skill acquisition has the potential to aid the development of the
most optimal techniques for skill acquisition225 and to help explicate suboptimal
performances of well-learned skills.226
The role of attention in skill acquisition and execution seems to be dependent
upon the three general stages of learning characterized by both qualitative differences in
cognitive structures supporting performance and differences in performance. Research
has suggested that early in learning, skill execution is supported by a set of nonintegrated control structures held in working memory and attended to in a step-by-step
fashion.227 As a result of this close attentional monitoring to skill execution, attention

Ibid., 6.

224

See R. N. Singer, R. Lidor, and J. H. Cauraugh, To Be Aware or Not Aware?


What to Think About While Learning and Performing a Motor Skill, The Sport
Psychologist 7 (1993): 19-30; G. Wulf, M. Hob, and W. Prinz, Instructions for Motor
Learning: Differential Effects of Internal Versus External Focus of Attention, Journal of
Motor Behavior 30 (1998): 169-79; and G. Wulf et al., Attentional Focus in Complex
Skill Learning, Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport 71 (2000): 229-39.
225

See R. F. Baumeister, Choking Under Pressure: Self-Consciousness and


Paradoxical Effects of Incentives on Skillful Performance, Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology 46 (1984): 610-20; S. L. Beilock and T. H. Carr, On the Fragility of
Skilled Performance: What Governs Choking Under Pressure? Journal of Experimental
Psychology: General 130 (2001): 701-25; and B. Lewis and D. Linder, Thinking About
Choking? Attentional Processes and Paradoxical Performance, Personality and Social
Psychology Bulletin 23 (1997): 937-44.
226

See J. R. Anderson, The Architecture of Cognition (Cambridge, MA: Harvard


University Press, 1983); Idem, Rules of Mind (Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, 1993); Fitts and
Posner, Human Performance; and R. W. Proctor and A. Dutta, Skill Acquisition and
Human Performance (Thousand oaks, CA: Sage, 1995).
227

79
devoted to controlling task performance is largely unavailable for either interpretation or
processing of non-task related stimuli. Therefore, in the early stages of the learning
process, self-regulation may actually disrupt execution of a particular skill by recruiting
attentional resources required for executing the task.228 With practice, procedural
knowledge specific to the execution of the task develops and improves real-time skill
execution leading to automated performance.229 This procedural knowledge operates
largely outside of working memory and does not require constant control.230 As a result,
attentional mechanisms may become available for processing stimuli that are not taskrelated. However, evidence suggests that performance of a second ancillary task may
prevent learning of the principal task231 and diminish performance in the principal task.232

F. H. Kanfer and M. K. Stevenson, The Effects of Self-Regulation on


Concurrent Cognitive Processing, Cognitive Therapy and Research 6 (1985): 667-84.
228

A. D. Fisk and W. Schneider, Memory as a Function of Attention, Level of


Processing, and Automatization, Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning,
Memory, and Cognition 10 (1984): 181-97.
229

See Anderson, The Architecture of Cognition; Fitts and Posner, Human


Performance; S. W. Keele and J. J. Summers, The Structure of Motor Programs, in
Motor Control: Issues and Trends, ed. G.E. Stelmach (New York: Academic Press,
1976); G. A. Kimble and L. C. Perlmuter, The Problem of Volition, Psychological
Review 77 (1970): 361-84; and E. Langer, and G. Imber, When Practice Makes
Imperfect: Debilitating Effects of Overlearning, Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology 37 (1979): 2014-24.
230

M. J. Nissen and P. Bullemer, Attentional Requirements of Learning: Evidence


from Performance Measures, Cognitive Psychology 19 (1987): 1-32.
231

R. DellAqua and P. Jolicoeur, Visual Encoding of Patterns is Subject to DualTask Interference, Memory & Cognition 28(2) (2000): 184-91.
232

80
Other studies involving musicians,233 hockey players,234 soccer players,235 and golfers236
have shown that experienced performers are better able to deal with conditions involving
dual-task environments than novices which suggests that constant online attentional
control may not be necessary once a high level of performance has been achieved. In
fact, once skills have been well-learned, attention devoted to the step-by-step components
of skill may be detrimental to the execution of the skill.237

Beilock et al., Attention Becomes Counterproductive, 6-16.

233

J. Leavitt, Cognitive Demands of Skating and Stick Handling in Ice Hockey,


Canadian Journal of Applied Sport Sciences 4 (1979): 46-55.
234

M. D. Smith and C. J. Chamberlin, Effect of Adding Cognitively Demanding


Tasks on Soccer Skill Performance, Perceptual and Motor Skills 75 (1992): 955-61.
235

See S. L. Beilock, S. A. Wierenga, and T. H. Carr, Expertise, Attention, and


Memory in Sensorimotor Skill Execution: Impact of Novel Task Constraints on DualTask Performance and Episodic Memory, The Quarterly Journal of Experimental
Psychology 55(4) (2002): 1211-40 and Idem, Memory and Expertise: What Do
Experienced Athletes Remember? in Expert Performance in Sports: Advances in
Research on Sport Expertise, ed. Janet L. Starkes and K. Anders Ericsson (Champaign, IL:
Human Kinetics, 2003), 295-320.
236

See Baumeister, Choking Under Pressure, 610-20; S. L. Beilock and T. H.


Carr, Fragility of Skilled Performance, 701-25; Kimble and Perlmuter, The Problem of
Volition, 361-84; Langer and Imber, When Practice Makes Imperfect, 2014-24; and
Lewis and Linder, Thinking About Choking? 937-44.
237

81
Masters and colleagues238 proposed that attention to high-level skills results in their
breakdown, in which the compiled real-time control structure of a skill is broken
down into a sequence of smaller, separate, independent unitssimilar to how
performance may have been organized early in learning. Once broken down, each unit
must be activated and run separately, which slows performance and, at each transition
between units, creates an opportunity for error that was not present in the chunked
control structure.239
Researchers have suggested that attention to step-by-step components of a welllearned skill may be prompted by pressure to perform at a high level which in turn may
contribute to suboptimal performance of well-learned skills.240 It is apparent that novel
and well-learned tasks require different levels of attentional resources for successful
execution.
If [skill-focused attention is] applied in other circumstances, such as practice
situations, in which performers are consciously attempting to dismantle their skill and
modify certain parts in accord with data collected by self-regulatory activities such as
those mentioned above, skill-focused attention may actually be helpful. That is, when
the goal is not to maximize real-time performance but instead to explicitly alter or
change performance processes to achieve a different outcome, skill-focused attention
may be beneficial. In this manner, skill-focused attention may become embedded in
the metacognitive activities of self-regulation.241

See R. S. W. Masters, Knowledge, Knerves, and Know-How: The Role of


Explicit Versus Implicit Knowledge in the Breakdown of a Complex Motor Skill Under
Pressure, British Journal of Psychology 83 (1992): 343-58; R. S. W. Masters et al.,
Reinvestment: A Dimension of Personality Implicated in Skill Breakdown Under
Pressure, Personality & Individual Differences 14 (1993): 655-66.
238

Beilock et al., Attention Becomes Counterproductive, 8.

239

See Baumeister, Choking Under Pressure, 610-20; Beilock and Carr, Fragility
of Skilled Performance, 701-25 and Lewis and Linder, Thinking About Choking? 93744.
240

Beilock et al., Attention Becomes Counterproductive, 15.

241

82
The importance of attentional mechanisms and their training or practice implications are
obvious with compulsory attention to step-by-step components in early stages shifting to
self-regulation in later stages of skill acquisition.
Motor Learning and the Human Hand
Handedness and Facility of the Non-Dominant Hand
Over the course of history, the number of left-handers in the general population
has been estimated to be between approximately one and twenty-nine percent depending
upon the testing method.242 On the basis of performance studies, Hardyck and
Petrinovich have estimated the number to be between eight and ten percent.243 Several
studies have been conducted to determine whether or not various groups might differ in
measures of handedness from the general population. A study conducted by Oldfield244
found no differences in handedness between musicians and nonmusicians while other
studies have found left and mixed-handers to be overrepresented in musician
populations.245 A particularly interesting study by Byrne examined handedness of music

C. Hardyck and L. F. Petrinovich, Left-Handedness, Psychological Bulletin 84


(1977): 391.
242

Ibid.

243

R. C. Oldfield, Handedness in Musicians, British Journal of Psychology 60


(1969): 91-9.
244

See B. Byrne, Handedness and Musical Ability, British Journal of Psychology


65 (1974): 279-81; K. O. Gttestam, Left-Handedness Among Students of Architecture
and Music, Perceptual and Motor Skills 70 (1990): 1323-27; and M. Hassler and N.
Birbaumer, Handedness, Musical Abilities, and Dihaptic and Dichotic Performance in
Adolescents: A Longitudinal Study, Developmental Neuropsychology 4 (1988): 129-45.
245

83
students and found that the proportion of mixed-handedness was greater among
instrumentalists but not singers.246 Results of research by Christman also demonstrated
that populations of musicians such as string players who, according to his definition, play
instruments requiring greater bimanual coordination than others, display greater
proportion of left- and/or mixed-handedness.247 However, recent studies have shown that
the prevalence of left- or mixed-handedness in musicians is only four to six percent
higher than in nonmusicians.248 What remains more difficult to assess is whether the
observed differences amongst populations occur as musicians self-select with regard to
their chosen profession or whether developing skills necessary to play particular
instruments results in weakening the degree of ones handedness.
Attempts to address this issue often involve studying the long-term effects of
practice on hand skill asymmetry. Research by Jncke, Schlaug, and Steinmetz found
that right-handed musicians demonstrated a reduced degree of hand skill asymmetry in
comparison to right-handed nonmusicians.249 The reduced asymmetry demonstrated by

Byrne, Handedness and Musical Ability, 279-81.

246

Stephen Christman, Handedness in Musicians: Bimanual Constraints on


Performance, Brain and Cognition 22 (1993): 266-72.
247

See J. P. Aggleton, R. W. Kentridge, and J. M. M. Good, Handedness and


Musical Ability: A Study of Professional Orchestral Players, Composers, and Choir
Members, Psychology of Music 22 (1994): 148-56; A. N. Gilbert and C. J. Wysocki,
Hand Preference and Age in the United States, Neuropsychologia 30 (1992): 601-8;
and I. B. Perelle and L. Ehrman, An International Study of Human Handedness: The
Data, Behavior Genetics 24 (1994): 217-28.
248

Lutz Jncke, Gottfried Schlaug, and Helmuth Steinmetz, Hand Skill


Asymmetry in Professional Musicians, Brain and Cognition 34 (1997): 424-32.
249

84
musicians was thought to be due to gains in skill of the non-dominant hand. Within
musician populations, keyboardists performed better than string players in a finger
tapping task, but better performance was not linked to performance asymmetry as the
level of asymmetry was similar in both groups. Furthermore, results indicated that hand
skill asymmetry was related to the age at musicians began their training with less
asymmetry associated with earlier training.
Bi-manual Coordination
Many daily activities, such as tying ones shoes or pouring a glass of milk, for
example, require coordinated bimanual movements. The motion of the limbs is
coordinated with regard to each task and displays a great amount of temporal and spatial
diversity between tasks. Numerous activities, such as walking, riding bike, or swimming,
are cyclical and involve synchronized or alternated movement of muscle pairs, but other
tasks, such as tying shoelaces, opening a bottle, or playing a musical instrument, require
alternated movement of limb pairs. Interestingly enough, principles of interlimb
coordination cannot be deduced from those regarding unimanual movements.
Research indicates that biological systems often demonstrate synchronization. 250
Indeed, there is a basic tendency of limbs to operate in synchrony which results in

See S. L. Bressler and J. A. S. Kelso, Cortical Coordination Dynamics and


Cognition, Trends in Cognitive Sciences 5 (2001): 26-36; J. A. S. Kelso, Dynamic
Patterns: The Self-Organization of Brain and Behavior (Cambridge, Massachusetts:
MIT Press, 1995); and F. Varela et al., The Brainweb: Phase Synchronization and
Large-Scale Integration, Nature Reviews. Neuroscience 2 (2001): 229-39.
250

85
coordination constraints due to temporal and spatial parameters of movement.251 Even
amputees with phantom limbs maintain a tendency toward bimanual coupling.252 Many
activities, such as playing the piano, require that this synchronization be overcome.
Modes of Interlimb Coordination
Despite the fact that other modes exist, it is generally agreed that quadrupedal
animals and humans display a basic tendency toward either in-phase or anti-phase
coordination of the limbs with a prevalent one-to-one relationship in the frequency of
movements.253 In-phase coordination of the index fingers, for example, occurs when
similar muscles in the two fingers are active and the fingers mirror one another. Antiphase coordination occurs when nonhomologous muscles are active, when the index
fingers point in the same direction, for example. Research regarding cyclical bimanual
See E. A. Franz, Spatial Coupling in the Coordination of Complex Actions,
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A50 (1997): 684704; J. A. S. Kelso, D.
L. Southard, and D. Goodman, On the Coordination of Two-Handed Movements,
Journal of Experimental. Psychology 5 (1979): 22938; Idem, On the Nature of Human
Interlimb Coordination, Science 203 (1979): 102931; R. G. Marteniuk, C. L.
MacKenzie, and D. M. Baba, Bimanual Movement Control: Information Processing
and Interaction Effects, The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A36(2)
(1984): 335-65; D. E. Sherwood, Distance and Location Assimilation Effects in Rapid
Bimanual Movement, Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport 62 (1991): 302-8;
Idem, Hand Preference, Practice Order, and Spatial Assimilations in Rapid Bimanual
Movement, Journal of Motor Behavior 26 (1994): 123-34; S. P. Swinnen et al.,
Control of Bilateral Asymmetrical Movements, Experimental Brain Research 85
(1991): 163-73; and C. B. Walter et al., Systematic Error in the Hierarchical
Organization of Physical Action, Cognitive Science 25 (2001): 393-422.
251

E. A. Franz and V. S. Ramachandran, Bimanual Coupling in Amputees with


Phantom Limbs, Nature Neuroscience 1(6) (1998): 443-4.
252

T. Wannier et al., Arm to Leg Coordination in Humans During Walking,


Creeping and Swimming, Experimental Brain Research 14 (2001): 375-9.
253

86
movements in humans has demonstrated that, not only is the in-phase mode more
accurate and stable,254 but it also requires less attention than the anti-phase mode.255 In
order to understand basic principles of interlimb coordination, scientists have generally
attempted to identify the limitations of the central nervous system by studying different
movements performed simultaneously. Swinnen indicated that archaic response
tendencies or coordination modes that the system settles into when stressed might also
reflect what most easily potentiated pathways of neural wiring are.256
Observed limitations involve asymmetry between the hands and spatial and
temporal features of movement. For example Ibbotson and Morton demonstrated that
when right-handed individuals tap in synchrony with a metronome while simultaneously
tapping as quickly as possible with the other hand, performance is better when the right
See Kelso, Dynamic Patterns; R. G. Carson, The Dynamics of Isometric
Bimanual Coordination, Experimental Brain Research 105 (1995): 46576; J. A. S.
Kelso, Phase Transitions and Critical Behavior in Human Bimanual Coordination,
American Journal of Physiology 246 (1984): R1000R1004; A. Semjen, J. J. Summers,
and D. Cattaert, Hand Coordination in Bimanual Circle Drawing, Journal of
Experimental Psychology Human Perception and Performance 21 (1995): 113957; S.
P. Swinnen, and K. Jardin, Egocentric and Allocentric Constraints in the Expression of
Patterns of Interlimb Coordination, Journal of Cognitive. Neuroscience 9 (1997): 348
77; S. P. Swinnen et al., Exploring Interlimb Constraints During Bimanual Graphic
Performance: Effects of Muscle Grouping and Direction, Behavioural Brain Research
90 (1998): 7987; and J. Yamanishi, M. Kawato, and R. Suzuki, Two Coupled
Oscillators as a Model for the Coordinated Finger Tapping by Both Hands, Biological
Cybernetics 37 (1980): 21925.
254

J. J. Temprado et al., Attentional Load Associated with Performing and


Stabilizing Preferred Bimanual Patterns, Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human
Perception and Performance 25 (1999): 157994.
255

S. P. Swinnen, Intermanual Coordination: From Behavioural Principles to


Neural-Network Interactions, Nature Reviews. Neuroscience 3 (2002): 353.
256

87
hand performs the faster-paced tapping.257 Spatial constraints are observed in drawing
lines of different amplitudes as there is a tendency for the amplitudes of the lines to
become similar.258 Subjects in whom the corpus callosum has been severed have less
difficulty in producing simultaneous movements with unique directional requirements
than normal subjects.259 Perhaps somewhat surprisingly, in finger tapping, these subjects
demonstrate temporal coupling during movements such as finger tapping;260 however,
when tasks become more complicated and require coordination beyond basic in-phase
coupling, they do not perform as well.261

N. R. Ibbotson, and J. Morton, Rhythm and Dominance, Cognition 9 (1981):

257

125-38.
See Marteniuk, MacKenzie, and Baba, Bimanual Movement Control, 335-65;
Sherwood, Distance and Location, 302-8; Idem, Rapid Bimanual Movement, 123-34;
H. Heuer et al., The Time-Course of Cross-Talk During the Simultaneous Specification
of Bimanual Movement Amplitudes, Experimental Brain Research 118 (1998): 381-92;
and W. Spijkers and H. Heuer, Structural Constraints on the Performance of
Symmetrical Bimanual Movements with Different Amplitudes, Quarterly Journal of
Experimental Psychology A48 (1995): 716-40.
258

See J. C. Eliassen, K. Baynes, and M. S. Gazzaniga, Direction Information


Coordinated Via the Posterior Third of the Corpus Callosum During Bimanual
Movements, Experimental Brain Research 128 (1999): 573-77; Idem, Anterior and
Posterior Callosal Contributions to Simultaneous Bimanual Movements of the Hands and
Fingers, Brain 123 (2000): 2501-11; and E. A. Franz et al., Dissociation of Spatial and
Temporal Coupling in the Bimanual Movements of Callosotomy Patients, Psychological
Science 7 (1996): 306-10.
259

B. Tuller and J. A. S. Kelso, Environmentally-Specified Patterns of Movement


Coordination in Normal and Split-Brain Subjects, Experimental Brain Research 75
(1989): 306-16.
260

See B. Preilowski, Possible Contribution of the Anterior Forebrain


Sommissures to Bimanual Motor Coordination, Neuropsychologia 10 (1972): 267-77
and Idem, Bilateral Motor Interaction: Perceptual-Motor Performance of Partial and
261

88
Finger Tapping and Polyrhythms
Studies involving finger tapping have often been used to study bimanual
coordination. In these studies, a distinction is often made between simple rhythms, those
in which one frequency is an integer multiple of another, and polyrhythms, such as 3:2 or
5:4. In general, research has shown that polyrhythms are more difficult to produce and
are produced with greater variability than simple rhythms.262 Early studies involving
polyrhythms required participants to play two to six notes per second and showed that, at
those speeds, participants were able to keep up with the beat263 or even anticipate the
beat.264 However, it appears that higher-order ratios comprised of large numerators and
denominators are less stable than lower-order ratios. One reason why musicians must
Complete Split-Brain Patients, in Cerebral Localization, ed. K. J. Zulch, O.
Creutzfeld, and G. C. Galbraith (New York: Springer, 1975), 115-32.
See Deutsch, Sequences in Parallel, 331-37; R. J. Jagacinski et al., Test of
Parallel Versus Integrated Structure in Polyrhythmic Tapping, Journal of Motor
Behavior 20 (1988): 416-42; S. Klapp et al., On Marching to Two Different Drummers:
Perceptual Aspects of the Difficulties, Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human
Perception and Performance 11 (1985): 814-27; C. E. Peper, P. J. Beek, and P. C. W.
van Wieringen, Multifrequency Coordination in Bimanual Tapping: Asymmetrical
Coupling and Signs of Supercriticality, Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human
Perception and Performance 19 (1993): 416-28; and P. J. Treffner and M. T. Turvey,
Resonance Constraints on Rhythmic Movements, Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Human Perception and Performance 19(6) (1993): 1221-37.
262

See J. Pressing, J. Summers, and J. Magill, Cognitive Multiplicity in


Polyrhythmic Pattern Performance, Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human
Perception and Performance 22(5) (1996): 1127-48 and J. Summers et al., Productions
of Polyrhythms, Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and
Performance 19(2) (1993): 416-28.
263

R. J. Jagacinski et al., Tests of Parallel Versus Integrated Structure in


Polyrhythmic Tapping, Journal of Motor Behavior 20(4) (1988): 416-42.
264

89
practice so-called difficult rhythms stems from this differential stability.265 As the
frequency of tapping is increased, a transition from higher-order ratios to lower-order
ratios is observed.266 Although two studies have obtained results contrary to the
following,267 Peters and Schwartz268 and Klapp et al.269 have demonstrated that the hands
are not independent of one another even at intermediate speeds. Furthermore,
performance of multi-frequency tasks is often associated with an asymmetrical coupling
effect in which the fast hand has a larger influence on the slow hand than vice versa.270
Nevertheless, musically trained subjects are more accurate in performance of

P. G. Zanone and J. A. S. Kelso, Evolution of Behavioral Attractors With


Learning: Nonequilibrium Phase Transitions, Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Human Perception and Performance 18(2) (1992): 418.
265

See Ibid. and C. E. Peper, P. J. Beek, and P. C. W. van Wieringen, Bifurcation


in Polyrhythmic Tapping: In Search of Farey Principles, in Tutorials in Motor
Neuroscience, ed. G.E. Stelmach (New York: Kluwer, 1991): 413-31.
266

See R. T. Krampe, et al., The Fast and Slow of Skilled Bimanual Rhythm
Production: Parallel Versus Integrated Timing, Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Human Perception and Performance 26(1) (2000): 206-33 and L. H. Shaffer,
Performances of Chopin, Bach and Bartok: Studies in Motor Programming, Cognitive
Psychology 13 (1981): 326-76.
267

Peters and Schwartz, Coordination of the Two Hands, 215-24.

268

S. T. Klapp, J. M. Nelson, and R. J. Jagacinski, Can People Tap Concurrent


Bimanual Rhythms Independently? Journal of Motor Behavior 30(4) (1998): 301-22.
269

See Ibid.; Summers et al., Productions of Polyrhythms, 416-28; W. D.


Byblow et al., Performance Asymmetries and Coupling Dynamics in the Acquisition of
Multifrequency Bimanual Coordination, Psychological Research 61 (1998): 56-70; M.
Peters, Constraints in the Coordination of Bimanual Movements and Their Expression in
Skilled and Unskilled Subjects, Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A37
(1985): 171-96; and Peters and Schwartz, Coordination of the Two Hands, 215-224.
270

90
polyrhythms than non-musicians271 which suggests the skill is amenable to practice.
Researchers have demonstrated that the ability to play the correct rhythm apparently
varies with ones skill level,272 focus of attention,273 and the complexity of the rhythm.
Subsequent research has focused on the stability of the performance of polyrhythms and
has attempted to resolve such as issues as what happens when motor control breaks
down.274
Bi-manual Transfer
Different kinds of transfer of learning are known to occur after the acquisition of a
motor task, ranging from transfer of relational to specific parameters of control.275 One
aspect that has received significant attention since the early twentieth century is bilateral
transfer. Early studies of bilateral transfer often used tasks like handwriting, drawing,
and maze learning.276 Criticism of this early body of work centered around the fact that,

Summers et al. Productions of Polyrhythms, 416-28.

271

Idem.

272

Pressing, Summers, and Magill, Cognitive Multiplicity, 1127-48.

273

Bogacz, Performance of Polyrhythms, 21-34.

274

D. E. Young and R. A. Schmidt, Transfer of Movement Control in Motor Skill


Learning, in Transfer of Learning: Contemporary Research and Applications, ed. S. M.
Cornier and J. D. Hagman (San Diego, Academic Press, 1987), 47-79.
275

See T. W. Cook, Studies in Cross Education: III. Kinesthetic Learning of an


Irregular Pattern, Journal of Experimental Psychology 17 (1934): 749-62; E. Weig,
Bilateral Transfer in the Motor Learning of Young Children and Adults, Child
Development 3 (1932): 247-67; and R. B. Ammons, C. H. Ammons, and R. L. Morgan,
Transfer of Skill and Decremental Factors Along the Speed Dimensions in Rotary
Pursuit, Perceptual and Motor Skills 6 (1956): 43.
276

91
in general, the motor component of the tasks was not particularly demanding. Critics
therefore suggested that any observed transfer of learning could largely be attributed to
subjects acquisition of a cognitive representation of the structure of the task that could
then be transferred to the other hand in order to reproduce the skill.
More recent contributions to the literature provide additional support277 and some
limitations for bilateral effects.278 More complicated tasks and those requiring greater
motor skill have since provided some insight. For example, in a study by Shapiro,
subjects learned a complex wrist-rotation task in which they were required to move to
seven ordered target positions in a particular amount of time.279 Over the course of five
days, subjects practiced the task with their right hand and received feedback from a
computer screen after each trial. Results over the five days changed dramatically as a
result of practice. On the fifth day, the subjects were unexpectedly asked to perform the
same task but with the left hand. Results indicated that the left- and right-hand
movements were nearly identical therefore demonstrating a high degree of transfer from
the right to the left hand. These results were particularly interesting since the same

See P. Dunham, Effect of Bilateral Transfer on Coincidence/Anticipation


Performance, Research Quarterly 48 (1977): 51-5; S. L. Puretz, Bilateral Transfer:
The Effects of Practice on the Transfer of Complex Dance Movement Patterns,
Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport 54 (1983): 48-54; and K. Tsuji and Y. Ide,
Development of Bilateral Transfer Skills in the Mirror Tracing, Japanese
Psychological Research 16 (1974): 171-8.
277

R. E. Hicks, J. M. Frank, and M. Kinsbourne, The Locus of Bimanual Skill


Transfer, The Journal of General Psychology 107 (1982): 277-81.
278

D. C. Shapiro, Bilateral Transfer of a Motor Program. Paper presented at the


AAHPER annual meeting, March, 1977.
279

92
direction of movement was required of each limb therefore employing non-homologous
muscle groupings. Young and Schmidt interpret Shapiros results as suggesting a
relatively abstract program structure that can employ various limb systems in producing a
response.280 Previous studies by Bray,281 Raibert,282 and Merton283 support this view.
Bray demonstrated transfer effects of mirror-tracing performance from the hand to the
foot while Raiberts research showed similarities in movement patterns when writing
with the dominant hand, the dominant arm, the nondominant hand, with the pen between
his teeth, and with the pen taped to his foot. Likewise, Merton demonstrated the
similarities between signatures of different sizes despite the difference in muscles
involved.
Completely specific acquisition of motor skills or perfect transfer of learning,
however, is rarely observed.284 Several studies have demonstrated that the subdominant
hand benefits more from dominant hand training than does the dominant hand from

Young and Schmidt, Transfer of Movement Control, 62.

280

C. W. Bray, Transfer of Learning, Journal of Experimental Psychology 11


(1928): 443-67.
281

M. H. Raibert, Motor Control and Learning by the State-Space Model, (Ph.D.


diss., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1977).
282

P. A. Merton, How We Control the Contraction of Our Muscles, Scientific


American 226 (1972): 30-7.
283

L. A. Teixeira, Timing and Force Components in Bilateral Transfer of


Learning, Brain and Cognition 44 (2000): 455.
284

93
subdominant hand training.285 To assess the effects of practice on performance with
regard to unimanual and bimanual movements, Schulze, et al.286 used a variant of the
pegboard task, a task widely used in neuropsychology for the examination of complex
uni- and bimanual motor functions.287 Results showed strong practice effects for each
hand and for each training condition. Of particular interest were the effects for the
untrained hands.
After training, movement times were considerably reduced for all hands and for all
training conditions. 2. Practice effects were found for the hand trained and also for the
untrained hand. 3. There was not a great difference in the size of the practice effects
for the right hand after left hand training or for the left hand after right hand training.
4. Task difficulty had no clear influence on the practice effect. 5. Bimanual
movements not only profit from bimanual training but also from unimanual training
and conversely unimanual movements benefit from bimanual training. However,
unimanual training resulted in strong practice effects for the bimanual tasks. However,
the practice effect of unimanual training on bimanual movements was smaller than the
practice effect of bimanual training on bimanual movements.288

See U. Halsband, Left Hemisphere Preponderance in Trajectorial Learning,


NeuroReport 3 (1992): 397-400; J. L. Laszlo, R. A. Baguley, and P. J. Bairstow,
Bilateral Transfer in Tapping Skill in the Absence of Peripheral Information, Journal
of Motor Behavior 2 (1970): 261-71; R. Milisen and C. V. Riper., Differential Transfer
of Training in a Rotary Activity, Journal of Experimental Psychology 24 (1939): 640-6;
and S. E. Parlow and M. Kinsbourne, Asymmetrical Transfer of Training Between
Hands: Implications for Interhemispheric Communication in Normal Brain, Brain and
Cognition 11 (1989): 98-113.
285

K. Schulze, E. Lders, and L. Jncke, Intermanual Transfer in a Simple Motor


Task, Cortex 38 (2002): 805-15.
286

See M. Annett, Left, Right, Hand and Brain: The Right Shift Theory (London:
Erlbaum, 1985) and A. L. Doyen and M. Carlier, Measuring Handedness: A Validation
Study of Bishops Reading Card Test, Laterality 7 (2002): 115-30.
287

Schulze, Lders, and Jncke, Intermanual Transfer, 805.

288

94
Although mechanisms underlying transfer of learning have yet to have been
identified, the body of evidence supporting bilateral transfer is significant. Most
importantly, the mounting body of research enhances our ability to optimize training
regiments, teaching methodologies, and ultimately performance.
Musical Skills and Acquisition of New Coordination Patterns
Numerous factors including hand dominance289, physiological functionality,290 and
training and attention291 have been shown to influence coordination patterns. The effect
of attention was studied by Peters and Schwartz who required subjects to count aloud one
of the streams in a 3:2 polyrhythm.292 Results indicated that both musically skilled and
unskilled subjects performed better when attending to the faster of the two streams.
However, a study by Pressing et al. demonstrated that expert percussionists were able to
perform a 4:3 polyrhythm with a high degree of accuracy regardless of which hand

P. J. Treffner and M. T. Turvey, Handedness and the Asymmetric Dynamics


of Bimanual Rhythmic Coordination, Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human
Perception and Performance 23(1) (1997): 1-15.
289

See P. J. Beek, C. E. Peper, and A. Daffertshofer, Modeling Rhythmic


Interlimb Coordination: Beyond the Kahen-Kelso-Bunz Model, Brain and Cognition 48
(2002): 149-65 and C. L. Peper, et al., Explanatory Limitations of the HKB Model:
Incentives for a Two-Tiered Model of Rhythmic Interlimb Coordination, Human
Movement Science 23 (2004): 673-97.
290

See Zanone and Kelso, Evolution of Behavioral Attractors with Learning, 40321; Klapp, Nelson, and Jagacinski, Can People Tap, 301-22; and J. Temprado et al.,
Attentional Demands Reflect Learning-Induced Alterations of Bimanual Coordination
Dynamics, European Journal of Neuroscience 16 (2002): 1390-4.
291

Peters and Schwartz, Coordination of the Two Hands, 215-24.

292

95
performed which stream or which stream was the focus of attention.293 Summers
suggested that the percussionists performance was perhaps a result of their training
which requires the learning of a given polyrhythm in three ways: one stream as the
fundamental pulse, the other stream as the fundamental pulse, and as a linear composite
of the two.294
Summers et al. also examined the potential for transfer effects regarding practice
of polyrhythms.295 Subjects who practiced a 5:3 polyrhythm were then asked to perform
the polyrhythm under a variety of conditions: reverse-hand arrangement, as fast as
possible, and with a concurrent memory task. Additionally, subjects were asked to
perform previously unrehearsed 3:2, 5:2, 4:3, and 5:4 polyrhythms. Results indicated that
the polyrhythms were performed with a high degree of accuracy in within-transfer
conditions, but transfer to tasks involving the new polyrhythms was poor.296
Because coordinated patterns have been shown to be amenable to training, the
mechanisms underlying learning and performance are of great interest to scientists and
those in associated health-related fields. Acquisition of new coordination patterns is
often considered in relationship to modes of coordination that have been previously
Pressing, Summers, and Magill, Cognitive Multiplicity, 1127-48.

293

J. Summers, Practice and Training in Bimanual Coordination Tasks:


Strategies and Constraints, Brain and Cognition 48 (2002): 173.
294

Summers et al., Production of Polyrhythms, 416-28.

295

J. J. Summers, Learning and Transfer of Multifrequency Patterns. In Rhythm


Perception and Production, ed. P. Desain and L. Windsor (Lisse: Swets and Zeitlinger,
2000): 69-80.
296

96
discussed.297 Swinnen suggests that the nature of pre-existing preferred patterns and the
tendency toward phase and frequency synchronization can often account for difficulties
in learning new coordination patterns.298 This implies that learning coordination skills
may involve two components: overcoming basic action patterns299 and re-integrating
action patterns. Efficiency in formation of the neural connections associated with the
new action patterns is dependent upon both extrinsic and intrinsic conditions. For
example, differences between individuals may be the result of genetic predisposition for
neural plasticity.300 On the other hand, it has been suggested that instructional techniques
have the ability to enhance the learning process. This is particularly true when the
See Kelso, Dynamic Patterns; Zanone and Kelso, The Evolution of Behavioral
Attractors with Learning, 403-21; S. Swinnen et al., Preferred and Induced
Coordination Modes During the Acquisition of Bimanual Movements with a 2:1
Frequency Ratio, Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and
Performance 23 (1997): 1087-1110; S. P. Swinnen, Age-Related Deficits in Motor
Learning and Differences in Feedback Processing During the Production of a Bimanual
Coordination Pattern, Cognitive Neuropsychology 15 (1998): 439-66; and P. Zanone
and J. Kelso, Coordination Dynamics of Learning and Transfer: Collective and
Component Levels, Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and
Performance 23 (1997): 1454-80.
297

Swinnen, Intermanual Coordination, 355.

298

See T. D. Lee, S. P. Swinnen, and S. Verschueren, Relative Phase Alterations


During Bimanual Skill Acquisition, Journal of Motor Behavior 27 (1995): 263-74; G.
Schner et al., Learning as Change of Coordination Dynamics: Theory and Experiment,
Journal of Motor Behavior 24 (1992): 29-48; S. P. Swinnen and C. B. Walter,
Constraints in Coordinating Limb Movements, in Cognition and Action in Skilled
Behaviour, ed. A. M. Colley and J. R. Beech (Amsterdam: North-Holland, 1988), 12743; S. P. Swinnen et al., Acquiring Bimanual Skills: Contrasting Forms of Information
Feedback for Interlimb Decoupling, Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning,
Memory, and Cognition 19 (1993): 1328-44; and Zanone, and Kelso, The Evolution of
Behavioral Attractors with Learning, 403-21.
299

S. P. Swinnen, Intermanual Coordination, 355.

300

97
desired action is conceptualized as a familiar symbol or entity301 or when feedback
techniques integrate information from the respective limbs in a meaningful way.302

E. A. Franz et al., Spatial Conceptual Influences on the Coordination of


Bimanual Actions: When a Dual Task Becomes a Single Task, Journal of Motor
Behavior 33 (2001): 103-12.
301

See S. P. Swinnen et al., Preferred and Induced Coordination Modes, 10871110; Swinnen, Age-Related Deficits, 439-66; Zanone, and Kelso, The Evolution of
Behavioral Attractors with Learning, 403-21; Lee, Swinnen, and Verschueren, Relative
Phase Alterations, 263-74, and F. Mechsner et al., Perceptual Basis of Bimanual
Coordination, Nature 414 (2001): 69-73.
302

98
CHAPTER 5
THE CHOPIN ETUDES AND SKILL ACQUISITION
Whiteside observed that, each Etude simply highlights one aspect of the
technical equipment; each Etude uses all of the equipment all the time.303 If one studies
the Chopin tudes for the purpose of developing particular aspects of technique, how
does one learn to utilize the technical equipment to perform them successfully and to
realize the artistic and physical ideals consistent with Chopins philosophy? Depending
upon the motor skills one has developed, studying the tudes could involve learning to
perform novel movements and/or enhancing the coordination of existing patterns of
movement. To that end, when combined with musical intuition and basic physiological
knowledge, Chopins interpretive markings may be of particular interest and help to the
pianist. Upon close examination of the dynamic and articulation markings in particular, I
believe that Chopins markings are not only interpretive but also suggest particular
movements and gestures that facilitate playing the tudes. The following is a discussion
of particular technical aspects and possible physical interpretation of Chopins stylistic
markings in representative tudes.
Force Gradation:
Chopin Etudes Op. 10, Nos. 3, 6, and 11; Op. 25, No. 3; and KK II b/3 Nr. 2
Gradation of force is a vital component of playing the piano in terms of dynamics,
color, and musical line, and it appears to be a particularly integral component of Chopin

Whiteside, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 109-10.

303

99
Etudes Op. 10, Nos. 3, 6, and 11 (see Figures 1, 2, and 3); Op. 25, No. 3 (see Figure 4);
and KK II b/3 Nr. 2 (see Figure 5).

Figure 1. Etude Op. 10, No. 3, Measures 1-4. Matching tone and shaping the melodic
line in the uppermost voice while integrating inner voices of the accompaniment in the
right hand. (Quoted from Frdric Chopin, Smtliche Etden, hg. Von Paul BaduraSkoda, Wiener Urtext Edition, Wien 1973/2005 (UT 50205). Printed by permission).

Figure 2. Etude Op. 10, No. 6, Measures 1-3. Relatively slow tempo, long melodic
notes, and intricate figuration marked sempre legatissimo in the left hand. (Copyright
1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich. Printed by permission.)

100
Figure 3. Etude Op. 10, No. 11, Measures 1-3. Voicing the uppermost voice to project
the melodic line amidst the harmonic support of the other voices. (Copyright 1983 G.
Henle Verlag, Munich. Printed by permission.)

Figure 4. Etude Op. 25, No. 3, Measures 1-3. Parallel and contrary motion between the
hands. Small melodic germs requiring one to think of the longer phrase as well as the
slur markings. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich. Printed by permission.)

Figure 5. Nouvelles Etudes KK II b/3 Nr. 2, Measures 1-4. Voicing the melody amongst
chords in close proximity requiring subtle and seamless changes of fingering. (Copyright
1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich. Printed by permission.)

101
The tempo indication for Op. 10, No. 6 is Andante. The tude requires legato
touch from note to note and mentally thinking through the tone in longer notes to
facilitate matching intensity and the perception of a seamless melodic line (see Figure 2).
Legato and staccato need redefining as they are related to piano playing. For singer
and string player, connecting tones produce an entirely different effect from the
connection of piano tones. The actual holding of the tone with the breath or the bow is
an expression of the emotional reaction involved with the music, because the dynamics
are controlled throughout the holding process. This is not so with the piano. . . . Any
projection of emotion, through the use of dynamics, must deal with the intensity of
tones at the moment of production. It is this relation of the intensity of tones at the
moment of their inception that almost entirely conveys the feeling of legato. Thus,
tonal relationships are more meaningful at the piano not through key connection but
through gradation in the energy used at the moment of tone production.304
The left hand is marked sempre legatissimo in accompanying the long notes of
the right, and the phrase markings highlight the importance of approaching the figures
with the largest mechanism possible, not just the fingers. A particularly interesting facet
is the parallel motion between the hands in executing the sixteenth notes and contrary
motion in the subsequent eighth notes.
Op. 10, No. 11 requires voicing the arpeggiations in each hand such that the
highest voice speaks melodically above the harmonic support of the inner voices (see
Figure 3). The staccato articulation marks over the first eighth notes of the measure
encourage a release of tension and initiate preparation for the shift of position that
follows. While the dots may also suggest a particular color of tone, they do not affect the
duration of the notes since the damper pedal is depressed. This supports the view that the
dots have specific implications with regard to physical execution. Voicing subsequent

Ibid., 183-4.

304

102
chords is facilitated if one truly heeds the phrase marking over each gesture indicating the
balance of the hand be shifted toward the little finger.
The middle, ring, and little fingers execute the melodic line in Op. 25, No. 3 (see
Figure 4). The suggested fingerings place the middle finger on the first note of each
three-note musical germ. The slur markings over each of these groups suggest a
continuous pattern of wrist movement beginning with a drop of the wrist initiating the
phrase with the middle finger followed by progressive release of the wrist.
Voicing the melody in KK II b/3 Nr. 2 is a particular challenge amid the close
proximity of the chords (see Figure 5). Furthermore, the phrase markings indicate
musical ideas at least four measures in length. Attention to the phrasing involves caring
for the continuity of the melodic line which incorporates repeated notes that might be
played with the same finger.
Etude Op. 10, No. 3
Op. 10, No. 3 requires matching tone from note to note and shaping the melodic
line in the uppermost voice while also integrating inner voices of the accompaniment in
the right hand (see Figure 1). Employing fingerings suggested by Chopin involves using
the same finger on consecutives notes and, at times, crossing the little finger under the
ring finger (see Figure 6).305 Although Chopins approach to fingering shocked many of
his contemporaries, he felt that certain fingerings made it possible to achieve particular
colors of sound. Associating particular qualities with each finger, he encouraged

Frdric Chopin, Etden, (Munich: G. Henle Verlag, 1983), 22-5.

305

103
cultivation of these differences.306 There are, then, many different qualities of sound,
just as there are several fingers. The point is to utilize the differences; and this, in other
words, is the art of fingering.307

Figure 6. Etude Op. 10, No. 3, Measures 5-8. Fingerings suggested by the composer use
the same finger on consecutives notes and, at times, crossing the little finger under the
ring finger. Note the use of crescendo and decrescendo in m. 5 coinciding with the ring
and little fingers. (Quoted from Frdric Chopin, Smtliche Etden, hg. Von Paul
Badura-Skoda, Wiener Urtext Edition, Wien 1973/2005 (UT 50205). Printed by
permission).

Finger substitutions and crossing fingers make it possible to physically connect


the melodic notes, but a sensitive ear and the ability to implement what the mind hears is
necessary to achieve the illusion of legato. The dynamic markings indicating subtle
swells and shapes encourage the ring and little fingers, those fingers which are the least
individuated and typically the weakest functionally, to play with more energy thereby

Marianne Ullyot, Chopin and Liszt: A Legacy of Teaching, Journal of the


American Liszt Society 10 (1981): 40.
306

James Huneker, Chopin; The Man and His Music (New York: C. Scribners
Sons, 1900), 53.
307

104
utilizing and accounting for some of the inherent physical differences amongst the fingers
(see Figure 6.)
Phrase markings and accents also provide clues to execution. The accent over the
quarter note in the right hand of m. 7, for example, implies a drop of the wrist and some
amount of energy initiating the ensuing grace note and sixteenths in the same measure.
Finger Independence: Chopin Etudes Op. 10, Nos. 2, 4, 8 and 12
With those by Chopin, pianists encounter tudes devoted to both the development
of finger independence and the ability to grade force. A particularly interesting
phenomenon is the apparent tradeoff between accuracy in force production and finger
independence.308 In other words, finger independence seems to diminish as accuracy in
force production increases.
Chopin Etudes Op. 10, Nos. 2, 4, 8, and 12 focus explicitly on the overall
development of finger independence. Op. 10, No. 2 is noteworthy for aiming to develop
independence of the little, middle, and ring fingers, those fingers that have been
demonstrated to be the least independent (see Figure 7).309 The fingerings Chopin
indicated entail crossing the middle finger over both the ring and little fingers and
crossing the ring finger over the little finger in ascending passages while descending
passages involved alternating either the ring and little finger or the ring and middle

Chiang et al., Practice-Related Modulations, 1033-43.

308

Hger-Ross and Schieber, Quantifying the Independence, 8542-50.

309

105
finger.310 Op. 10, No. 4 features scale-like passagework and intricate four-note finger
patterns facilitated by wrist and forearm rotation (see Figure 8).

Figure 7. Etude Op. 10, No. 2, Measures 1-2. Fingerings Chopin indicated entail
crossing the middle finger over both the ring and little fingers and crossing the ring finger
over the little finger in ascending passages. Descending passages involve alternating
either the ring and little finger or the ring and middle finger. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle
Verlag, Munich. Printed by permission.)

Figure 8. Etude Op. 10, No. 4, Measures 1-2. Scale-like passagework and intricate fournote finger patterns facilitated by wrist and forearm rotation. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle
Verlag, Munich. Printed by permission.)

Op. 10 No. 12, emphasizing the use of the left hand in melodic passagework, will
be discussed in greater detail in subsequent sections of this chapter.

Chopin, Etden, 18-21.

310

106
Etude Op. 10, No. 8
Four-note arpeggio figures incorporating step-wise links dominate Op. 10, No. 8
(see Figure 9). The accents occurring on each beat suggest a drop of the wrist on the
middle or ring fingers or the thumb depending on the direction of the melodic line and the
particular pattern (see Figure 10). In addition to the phrase marks over each ascending
and descending figure, the implied use of the wrist suggests use of larger mechanisms in
addition to the fingers, coordination that will facilitate speed and help prevent fatigue.
Additionally, the phrase markings direct the ear and upper arm to care for the longer line.
In this case, one must coordinate finger independence with upper arm motion in addition
to wrist and forearm rotation. Some rotation occurs as consecutive fingers are played. A
pattern of rotation is also initiated in places where the figuration is more tightly
constructed (see Figure 11, mm. 27-28). In these instances, the rotation occurs more
quickly and frequently than in mm. 1-2, for example.

Figure 9. Etude Op. 10, No. 8, Measures 1-2. Four-note arpeggio figures incorporating
step-wise links. Note the accents on each beat and the phrase markings over each
descending and ascending gesture. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich. Printed
by permission.)

107
Figure 10. Etude Op. 10, No. 8, Measures 8-13. Accents corresponding to drops of the
wrist on the middle finger and thumb. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich.
Printed by permission.)

Figure 11. Etude Op. 10, No. 8, Measures 26-29. Figuration requiring more rapid and
frequent wrist and forearm rotation. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich. Printed
by permission.)

108
Left Hand Facility: Chopin Etude Op. 10, No. 12
The technical challenges of Op. 10, No. 12 are largely constructed by way of
elaboration and alteration of three primary figures based on scales and arpeggios. The
first pattern, spanning nearly three octaves in two measures, is a decorated arpeggiation
of the opening G dominant seventh-chord in the right hand (see Figure 12). The second
pattern, arpeggiation of the tonic triad and added ninth (see Figure 13), establishes the
tonic key while the final pattern, an intricate chromatic scale (see Figure 14), ushers a
return to the tonic key and principal theme.

Figure 12. Etude Op. 10, No. 12, Measures 1-3. Decorated arpeggiation of the opening
G dominant seventh-chord in the right hand. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich.
Printed by permission.)

Figure 13. Etude Op. 10, No. 12, Measures 10-12. Arpeggiation of the tonic triad and
added ninth establishing the tonic key. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich.
Printed by permission.)

109
Figure 14. Etude Op. 10, No. 12, Measures 13-18. Intricate chromatic scale ushering a
return to the tonic key and principal theme. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich.
Printed by permission.)

Etude Op. 10, No. 12, mm. 1-2


Two-joint and multi-joint muscles are incapable of shortening to the extent
required to produce a full range of motion at all joints crossed simultaneously.311 For
example, when the wrist is flexed, the fingers are able to generate only a fraction of their
maximal force. Altering the position of the wrist also initiates subtle changes in the use
and coordination of the physical mechanisms which helps prevent fatigue.
The accents over the sixteenth notes which lie on each beat in mm. 1-2 (see
Figure 12) are significant because they suggest a drop in the wrist which is important. As
Whiteside noted in her discussion of the tudes, the wrist has the ability to facilitate such

Susan, J. Hall, Basic Biomechanics, 4th ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2003),

311

160-1.

110
elaborated passagework.312 Because the muscles responsible for flexing the fingers cross
several joints, finger function is affected by the position of the joints. Here, led perhaps
by the upper arm, the wrist can carry the hand and allow the fingers to articulate while
not being solely responsible for depressing each key. To that end, as mentioned
previously, while a particular part of the physical mechanism is highlighted in each tude,
the ingredients remain the same. It is therefore often the balance in integrating the
mechanisms that facilitates technical execution.
Etude Op. 10, No. 12, m. 9
The accompaniment pattern initiated in m. 9 requires crossing both the ring and
middle fingers over the thumb. To facilitate passing the thumb under the other fingers
and passing the fingers over, the hand was to be given a corresponding turn inward.313
The figure is then varied to suit the harmonic progression in mm. 14-16 (see Figure 14).
Phrase markings here suggest the association of a single fluid physical gesture
incorporating rotation from the little finger to the thumb and back with each arpeggio
figure. The gesture is then varied as the patterns last either for two or four beats.
Thematic material
While the challenges of the left hand are formidable, pianists must not allow the
technical difficulties to eclipse the thematic substance of the right hand. One of the
commonest experiences in the concert hall, during a performance of an tude, is hearing
one hand played in a scintillating manner while the other one is insensitive and
Whiteside, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 102.

312

Mikuli, Vorwort to Fr. Chopins Pianoforte-Werke, 3.

313

111
pedestrian. The technical problems have been solvedthe music has been lost.314 To
that end, Chopin was exact in his performance and insistence of dynamic shading and
nuance in both hands. In performance you should develop an ample, full and rounded
tone; shade the scale of nuances with infinite gradations between pianissimo and
fortissimo, though in pianissimo avoid any indistinct muttering, just as in fortissimo avoid
the sort of pounding that would hurt a sensitive ear.315 Executing the dynamics indicated
in mm. 62-64 requires not only careful monitoring of the sound from note to note or
chord to chord (see Figure 15), but managing separate scenarios for the hands as well.
For example, the left hand patterns are based on continuous cycles of crescendo and
decrescendo occurring either once or twice per measure whereas the right hand often
observes dynamics opposite those of the left hand. This coordination would likely be
developed in the initial phases of learning the tude in which slow performance is heavily
reliant upon sensory guidance. Finally, it is worth noting that practice at different
dynamic levels, which would require various levels of force, is written into the tude to
some extent. For example, the principal theme first appears forte in mm. 10-11 while it is
designated piano in mm. 20-21 (see Figures 13 and 16). Presumably, these differences
would be reflected in the corresponding accompaniment figures as well. Properties of
muscle are dependent upon a balance of characteristics to facilitate such variety.

Prostakoff and Rosoff, eds., Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 105.

314

Koczalski, Frdric Chopin. Betrachtungen, Skizzen, Analysen, 12.

315

112
Figure 15. Etude Op. 10, No. 12, Measures 61-66. Dynamics requiring careful
monitoring of the sound from note to note or chord to chord and managing separate
scenarios for the hands. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich. Printed by
permission.)

Figure 16. Etude Op. 10, No. 12, Measures 19-21. Thematic material marked piano in
comparison to m. 10 where it is marked forte. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag,
Munich. Printed by permission.)

The Thumb: Chopin Etude Op. 10, No. 5


Eigeldinger suggests that melodic use of the thumb on the black keys in Op. 10,
No. 5 is one of the significant technical innovations of the Chopin tudes. Op. 10, No. 5
requires integrating forearm and wrist rotation with articulation of the thumb and fingers
to achieve facile execution and brilliant tone quality. In particular, in mm. 23-26, for

113
example, it is clear from the phrase markings that Chopin suggested use of wrist and
forearm rotation to play either adjacent notes or those separated by a seventh, the seventh
between the A-flat and high G-flat in this case (see Figure 17). The articulation markings
over each G-flat imply a particular quality of sound but also a release of muscle tension
in the hand and forearm preparing the playing mechanism for the next gesture. Surely
one must balance use of the fingers as articulators as well, but use of the wrist and
forearm will facilitate speed and ease. Because this tude is in the key of G-flat major,
the pianist must become comfortable executing movements primarily on the black keys
with the hands farther from the body and the wrists necessarily higher than on the white
keys.

Figure 17. Etude Op. 10, No. 15, Measures 20-26. Note the phrase markings in mm. 2326 suggesting wrist and forearm rotation. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich.
Printed by permission.)

114
Measures 1-4 present the basic patterns that are fundamental to the tude (see
Figure 18). A descending G-flat major arpeggiation spanning approximately two octaves
consisting of thirds, fourths, and sixths in mm. 1-2 is followed by an ascending dominant
arpeggio consisting of fourths, fifths, and octaves. Wrist and forearm rotation may aid
execution of the fragments involving smaller intervals, as in beat two of m. 1, for
example. Rotation also facilitates the coverage of keyboard distance and change of
direction occurring on the first beat of m. 3 as the D-flat is a common harmonic link
between the first two measures and mm. 3-4. In the ascending passage in m. 3, a drop of
the wrist coincides with the thumb and initiates an arc of movement that is larger than the
mechanisms of rotation and which carries the hand to m. 5 in this instance.

Figure 18. Etude Op. 10, No. 5, Measures 1-7. Note the fundamental pattern of the
tude. A descending G-flat major arpeggiation spanning approximately two octaves is
followed by an ascending dominant arpeggio consisting of fourths, fifths, and octaves.
(Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich. Printed by permission.)

115
The thumb and little finger are particularly important since they contact the piano
key and place the hand in its new position in the descending and ascending patterns,
respectively. In descending patterns for example, it is the upper arm, forearm, hand, and
thumb that bring the fourth and fifth fingers into position to continue the pattern.
Furthermore, as Whiteside notes, If these details are accurately timed with the
progression of the first lever [upper arm], and this lever keeps its control of distances and
level, there will be no consciousness of any break in the legato when the hand is passed to
the new position on the keyboard.316
Speed: Chopin Etudes Op. 10, No. 4 and Op. 25, No. 12
Etude Op. 10, No. 4
One of the primary challenges of Op. 10, No. 4 appears to be rapid execution of
scalar and arpeggiated figures requiring different amounts of rotation (see Figure 19).
This tude requires development of this coordination in each hand which ultimately
requires the training of non-homologous muscles since the direction of the figuration is
the same regardless of which hand has the pattern. In his fingerings and articulation
markings, Chopin seems to have offered clues as to how to approach the tude physically.

Whiteside, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 103.

316

116
Figure 19. Etude Op. 10, No. 4, Measures 1-8. Scalar and arpeggiated figures requiring
varying degrees of rotation. (Quoted from Frdric Chopin, Smtliche Etden, hg. Von
Paul Badura-Skoda, Wiener Urtext Edition, Wien 1973/2005 (UT 50205). Printed by
permission).

The accent mark on the first beat of m. 1 encourages a bounce of the wrist
facilitating a release of tension functioning as a preparatory gesture to the phrase
beginning on the second sixteenth note of the same measure. In many ways, Chopin
incorporated the conductors preparatory gesture with this accent.
The fingerings Chopin indicated in the first measure, with the thumb of the right
hand playing the third sixteenth note of every beat, initiate a pattern of rotation occurring
every four sixteenth notes through the first half of beat one in the second measure. The

117
first G-sharp in m. 2 functions both as the second half of the scalar four-note pattern
which began two sixteenths earlier and as the beginning of a new pattern of rotation
toward the little finger and back to either the index finger or thumb on beats two, three,
and four.
Accents and phrase markings in m. 3 facilitate a drop of the wrist on each beat.
They imply cyclical rotation from the thumb toward the little finger and the highest note
of the gesture and returning to the thumb and the beginning of another cycle on the next
beat.
Phrase markings corresponding to the melody in m. 4 suggest rotation from the
thumb to the little finger and further indicate and allow a non-legato approach between
the top note of one octave and the first note of the pattern that follows.
The processes occurring in the right hand in mm. 1-4 are similar in the left hand
but sometimes employ subtle differences in expected fingerings. For example, whereas
the thumb initiates the right-hand pattern in m. 1, and one might therefore expect the little
finger of the left hand to function similarly, it is instead the fourth finger of the left hand
that balances the hand in rotation in m. 6 (see Figure 19). Likewise, whereas the right
hand rotates to the little finger in m. 2, in order to maintain the tonal relationships in m. 6,
the left hand rotates toward the thumb.
The thematic material of the entire tude is generated from the first four measures.
As discussed above, the theme appears in both hands, and it appears in various keys.
This in turn changes the spatial relationship between the hands and the body. For
example, in m. 25, the theme appears a diminished fourth higher than in m. 1 (see Figure

118
20), and the suggested fingerings place the index finger on the lowest note of each of the
four-note patterns. The challenge in this case and in similar places is maintaining the
ease of executing a basic pattern of rotation despite changes in the patterns of black and
white keys which ultimately affect the balance of the hand.

Figure 20. Etude Op. 10, No. 4, Measures 24-29. Theme appears a diminished fourth
higher than in m. 1. (Quoted from Frdric Chopin, Smtliche Etden, hg. Von Paul
Badura-Skoda, Wiener Urtext Edition, Wien 1973/2005 (UT 50205). Printed by
permission).

Etude Op. 25, No. 12


Propelling the hands laterally up and down the keyboard is one of the chief skills
to be mastered in Op. 25, No. 12 (see Figure 21). For the most part, accent marks appear
on the first and third beats of the measure and coincide with changes in direction of the
figuration. As such, the accents not only suggest harmonic significance but
corresponding drops of the wrists as well. In general, the phrase markings incorporate a

119
sweep up and back down the keyboard and lead the ear to the harmonic progressions
highlighted by the accented notes.

Figure 21. Etude Op. 25, No. 12, Measures 1-2. Gestures requiring smooth lateral
movements. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich. Printed by permission.)

Within these gestures, one must change hand positions on the repeated notes in
order to travel the lateral distance. The lack of accent marks and the longer phrase
markings indicate that the changes of position must occur smoothly to maintain the
musical line. Some amount of forearm rotation is surely necessarily to execute each set
of three notes if the fingers are not to be entirely responsible for depressing the keys and
facilitating the changes of position without particular articulation of the occurrence.
Passing is always easy if the power travels smoothly and maintains the control of
placement and level, and if the hand is propelled into position by the two large levers. . . .
The hand [and not the fingers] should do whatever it can to take lateral distance.317 The
fingerings Chopin indicated in Op. 10, No. 10 suggest a regular pattern of arm and wrist

Whiteside, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 103.

317

120
rotation with the thumb playing all of the single notes in the right hand and the highest
notes being played presumably by either the ring or little fingers depending on hand size.
Flexibility and Suppleness via Imagery: Etude Op. 25, No. 1
A study in cantabile playing, the Harp Etude presents several challenges
involving flexibility, speed, and conceptualizing tone in highlighting the melody over
continuous sextuplet figures in the accompaniment (see Figure 22). Managing the melody
and accompaniment requires flexibility and suppleness of the wrists and arms to facilitate
playing each sextuplet figure as a single gesture comprising the phrase as opposed to
articulating each note individually with the fingers. To alert the upper arm to take the
place of fingers in responding to the aural image is the task which comes first in
achieving the desired coordination in the playing mechanism for virtuosity in playing the
Etudes.318 Abby Whitesides work on the control of playing by the upper arm helped
her to discover that the physical continuity which the upper arm exerts through its pull is
not only the basis of speed without strain, it is also the essential physical counterpart of
musical continuitythe continuity within the phrase, and in the phrase-to-phrase
progression.319

Ibid., 31.

318

Prostakoff and Rosoff, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 4.

319

121
Figure 22. Etude Op. 25, No. 1, Measures 1-2. Importance of flexibility and suppleness
in balancing the melody amongst continuous sextuplet figures. (Copyright 1983 G.
Henle Verlag, Munich. Printed by permission.)

Continuity in the melody over the course of phrases requires care in matching the
tone of successive melody notes within a framework of listening for the direction and
completion of the phrase.
The fact is, the student who is accustomed to notewise listening will not always hear
the subtleties of dynamics and timing which are involved, and when, on rare occasions,
he does hear them he will not always prefer the superior, more continuous
performance. The notes seem to go by too fast, in too bland a fashion. He wants to
stop and listen to each note in turn. . . . Training the ear to listen phrasewise or, as
Abby Whiteside would say, with a rhythm, calls for establishing an involvement
with the upper armspecifically with the pull exerted by the upper armbecause the
circular joint by which it is connected with the torso enables the arm to control
horizontal progressionthe progression between the notes of the phrase.320
The ear and the upper arm are therefore significant components in successfully
playing this tude, but how does one shift importance from the fingers to the upper arm in
practice? Whitesides image of the lariat is particularly appropriate in discussing this
coordination.
The upper arm is the fulcrum for the forearm. The fulcrum-force in the upper arm is
the pull which controls the level at which tone is produced, as well as the slight turning
Whiteside, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 22-3.

320

122
of the humerus which controls distance. The illustration of this fulcrum-force in the
upper arm, which seems most pertinent to me, is the control of a lariat: All of the
patterns which the rope is made to go through are controlled by the hand as an
extension of the primary action of the upper arm, as it makes miniature turnings, plus a
consistent and continuous slight pull at the shoulder joint. Tiny actions produce
fantastic shapes and patterns with the loop of the rope. Tiny actions in the upper arm
produce great beauty in performance. Let the arm stop this slight turning and pulling,
and the rope falls to the ground.321
It is worth noting that the rotary movements of the upper arm Whiteside describes
are miniature. That is, while its importance cannot be overstated, the movement itself
must not be exaggerated. The movement must be natural or one will have created
another difficulty. What provides the impetus for the upper arm in playing this tude?
According to both Whiteside and Chopin, it is a sharp aural image that lays the
foundation. It is said that Chopin explained to one of his pupils the manner in which
this study should be executed. Imagine, he said, a little shepherd who takes refuge in a
peaceful grotto from an approaching storm. In the distance rushes the wind and the rain,
while the shepherd gently plays a melody in his flute.322 Whiteside goes even further
and links the aural image with the physical response to the basic rhythm of the piece.
A sensitive, phrase-wise performance will not take placeno matter how much
scholarship, emotional involvement, and natural musical endowment is present
unless the performer uses this basic rhythm continuously whether he is aware of it or
not. It is only when the emotional response to the aural image of the music creates in
the performers body a physical response, a basic rhythm, as a counterpart to the

Ibid., 38.

321

Jean Ckeczynski [Jan Kleczynski], Chopins Greater Works, trans. with


additions by Natalie [sic] Janotha (London, William Reeves, 188?), 19; quoted in JeanJacques Eigeldinger, Chopin: Pianist and Teacher as Seen by His Pupils, trans. by
Naomi Shohet with Hrysia Osostowica and Roy Howatt, ed. by Roy Howatt
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986), 69.
322

123
rhythmic flow in a composition, that he is enabled to realize to the fullest extent the
beauty inherent in the music.323
Polyrhythms: Drei Etden: KK II b/3, No. 1
It has been demonstrated indirectly by Peters and Schwartz and directly by Klapp
et al. that the hands are not independent in performance of polyrhythms even at
intermediate speeds.324 Additionally, a recent study of pianists and guitarists revealed
decreased inhibition between the hemispheres of the brain which might actually facilitate
bimanual coordination by increasing signal transfer between the hemispheres.325 There is
a continuum of cognitive and perceptual monitoring from slow speeds up to about six
notes per second that is detailed and fine-grained. However as speed increases beyond
approximately six notes per second, control becomes global and more coarse. The
incorporation of polyrhythms into technical study is therefore noteworthy and significant
as pianists further develop, not independence, but bi-manual coordination.
It is obvious regarding his philosophy of advocating scale practice in patterns of
four notes against three that Chopin viewed polyrhythms as a unique technical challenge.
Furthermore, polyrhythms are an integral component of his tudes. Coordinating the

Whiteside, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 4-5.

323

See M. Peters and S. Schwartz, Coordination of the Two Hands and Effects of
Attentional Manipulation in the Production of a Bimanual 2:3 Polyrhythm, Australian
Journal of Psychology 41(2) (1989): 215-24 and S. T. Klapp, J. M. Nelson, and R. J.
Jagacinski, Can People Tap Concurrent Bimanual Rhythms Independently? Journal of
Motor Behavior 30(4) (1998): 301-22.
324

M. C. Ridding, B. Brouwer, and M. A. Nordstrom, Reduced Interhemispheric


Inhibition in Musicians, Experimental Brain Research 133(2) (July 2000): 249-53.
325

124
hands in continuous 4:3 polyrhythms is one of the obvious challenges of the first of three
tudes composed for the method of Moscheles and Ftis (see Figure 23), and yet the
individual parts require subtle skill.

Figure 23. Etude KK II b/3, No. 1, Measures 1-11. Though primarily focused on the 4:3
polyrhythm, note the close proximity of the hands and the crossing of fingers over the
thumb in the left hand in m. 5. (Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich. Printed by
permission.)

The quarter note triplet figures of the right hand and the duple figures of the left
hand are established separately in the first eight measures. These figures present several
challenges. First, the melodic figure in m. 1 begins after the first beat of the measure, and
it is fingered with the thumb. As the phrase mark indicates, the pianist must listen
carefully to execute the beginning of the melody as a preparatory gesture, to refrain from
accenting the thumb, and to maintain the integrity of the intended line. Continuity is
achieved in shaping the melody over the barline of each measure, a pattern that continues
in the tude with long phrases throughout. The eighth notes in the left hand require

125
crossing fingers over the thumb in harmonic arpeggiations. The lowest note of these
arpeggiations is played with the little finger, and movement of the forearm and hand
facilitates rotation to and over the thumb. A drop of the wrist coinciding with the little
finger may be used at the beginning of each cycle of rotation, however; it must be
unobtrusive and within the scope of the line. Changes of the damper pedal occur each
measure with the changes of harmony, but care is needed to monitor clarity of the right
hand due to the chromaticism of the melody and the sound of the modern piano.
Furthermore, the proximity of the hands also necessitates care in balance and voicing the
melody (see Figure 23, m. 9).

126
CHAPTER 6
CONCLUSIONS
Strategies for Learning and Teaching
Practice and Performance
Since it has been demonstrated that performance gains are positively correlated to
practice, what parameters of practice might be altered to facilitate and enhance
performance? The following discussion considers types of practice that might be
beneficial, piano literature and exercises that might be helpful, and instructional strategies
that might be particularly effective.
Parameters of mental practice pertaining to effectiveness
It has been suggested that benefits in physical performance are particularly
significant when training involves a combination of physical and mental practice.326
Wohldmann, Healy, and Bourne Jr. have recently suggested that these benefits might
derive from the fact that the same memory representations are used in both types of
practice, and that mental practice may work by activating and strengthening
representations formed previously by physical practice.327

C. B. Corbin, Mental Practice, in Ergogenic Aids and Muscular Performance,


ed. W. P. Morgan (New York: Academic Press, 1972), 93-118.
326

E. L. Wohldmann, A. F. Healy, and L. E. Bourne Jr., Pushing the Limits of


Imagination: Mental Practice for Learning Sequences, Journal of Experimental
Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 33(1) (2007): 254.
327

127
Although there is evidence suggesting that mental practice can be an effective
ergogenic aid,328 there are apparently parameters related to the effectiveness of its use in
practice. In combining the results of numerous studies concerning mental practice, a
meta-analysis of the literature pertaining to mental practice, Driskell, Copper, and Moran
determined that the effectiveness of mental practice is moderated by the type of task, the
interval between practice and performance, and the duration of mental practice.329
With regard to the type of task, Driskell, Copper, and Moran concluded that,
while mental practice was effective in both cognitive and physical tasks, it appeared to be
particularly effective the more a particular task required cognitive activities. For
musicians, this may highlight the importance of basic musicianship skills in addition to
intellectual and interpretive analysis of a particular piece of music.
See R. S. Sackett, The Influence of Symbolic Rehearsal Upon the Retention of
a Maze Habit, Journal of General Psychology 10 (1934): 376-95; Ibid., The
Relationship Between Amount of Symbolic Rehearsal and Retention of a Maze Habit,
Journal of General Psychology 13, (1935): 113-28; H. M. Perry, The Relative
Efficiency of Actual and Imaginary Practice in 5 Selected Tasks, Archives of Psychology
4 (1939): 5-75; R. A. Vandell, R. A. Davis, and N. A. Clugston, Function of Mental
Practice in the Acquisition of Motor Skills, Journal of General Psychology 29 (1943):
243-50; E. D. Ryan and J. Simons, Efficacy of Mental Imagery in Enhancing Mental
Rehearsal Motor Skills, Journal of Sport Psychology 4 (1982): 41-51; S. L. Ross, The
Effectiveness of Mental Practice in Improving the Performance of College Trombonists,
Journal of Research in Music Education 33 (1985): 221-30; C. Lee, Psyching up for a
Muscular Endurance Task: Effects of Image Content on Performance and Mood State,
Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology 12 (1990): 66-73; and E. L. Wohldmann, A. F.
Healy, and L. E. Bourne Jr., Pushing the Limits of Imagination: Mental Practice for
Learning Sequences, Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and
Cognition 33(1) (2007): 254-61.
328

J. Driskell, C. Copper, and A. Moran, Does Mental Practice Enhance


Performance? Journal of Applied Psychology, 79(4) (1994): 481-92.
329

128
Prior to much of the scientific research in this area, Whiteside seemed to have
been a proponent of this notion in insisting on the importance of understanding the
structure of a piece and responding physically and emotionally to ones impression of a
piece.
A primary tool for achieving a basic rhythm [the continuous activity in the
arms and torso which control the total physical apparatus as the performer plays a
composition.]330 is outlining a composition. This means playing the highlights and
omitting details (some of the notes of the music). In leaving out details remember that
the sole purpose is to emphasize the structural outline of the music. If this outlining is
done in a cut-and-dried fashion, without the emotional response to the music, it is of no
value. It is only when the outlining intensifies the grace of going forward with a lilting
step, as it were, that it illuminates, quickens, and frees the emotional rhythm in the
torso.331
Quite interestingly, Driskell, Copper, and Moran concluded that experienced
subjects benefit equally from mental practice in both cognitive and physical activities and
suggested that differences between experienced subjects and novices may indicate that
novices have not formed an approximation of the skill. Therefore, symbolic rehearsal
may not be sufficient to guide novice performance.
The extent to which novices benefit from mental training remains unclear,
however. Several studies have demonstrated that novices may enhance physical
performance through use of mental imagery alone. Kohl and Roenker demonstrated
transfer of learning from use of imagery to physical execution even when mental practice
and performance involved different hands.332 Likewise, a 2007 study by Wohldmann,

Prostakoff and Rosoff, glossary, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 198.

330

Whiteside, Mastering the Chopin Etudes, 53

331

129
Healy, and Bourne Jr. demonstrated that mental practice was sufficient to produce or
maintain a level of performance comparable to that obtained by physical practice.333 A
recent study by Shanks and Cameron, however, resulted in no effect of mental practice in
learning a motor sequence task.334 Differences in the results of these studies are thought
to arise from different emphases on the perceptual, mental, and motor components of the
tasks.335
Driskell, Copper, and Moran also concluded that the effects of mental rehearsal
are most robust when performance immediately follows mental practice. They concluded
that the initial effects of mental practice were reduced to approximately one-half of their
initial magnitude if the period between mental practice and performance was extended to
14 days.
Regarding the duration of the intervention, while it was determined that the
cumulative effect of mental practice was positive, the beneficial effect diminished with
duration. In other words, the longer an individual practices mentally, the less beneficial it
becomes. Based on these results, Driskell, Copper, and Moran suggested a period of

R. M. Kohl and D. L. Roenker, Mechanism Involvement During Skill


Imagery, Journal of Motor Behavior 15 (1983): 179-90.
332

Wohldmann, Healy, and Bourne Jr., Pushing the Limits of Imagination, 254-

333

61.
D. R. Shanks and A. Cameron, The Effect of Mental Practice on Performance
in a Sequential Reaction Time Task, Journal of Motor Behavior 32 (2000): 305-13.
334

Wohldmann, Healy, and Bourne Jr., Pushing the Limits of Imagination, 254-

335

61.

130
mental practice of approximately twenty minutes and a regiment of refreshing mental
practice every week or two.
Several other studies have demonstrated that performance gains related to mental
practice occur only when subjects have previous experience with the task.336 Mulder et
al. demonstrated that subjects were unable to learn a novel toe movement with mental
practice alone.337 Only subjects with some experience in the task benefited from mental
practice. The scientists therefore concluded that humans are able to mentally train only
those movements performed before.
Finally, Mulder et al. have recently observed a correlation between age and
imagery capacity noting that elderly subjects displayed slightly worse motor imagery
capacity than younger subjects particularly with regard to first-person imagery.338 Their
results indicated not a general decline in motor imagery capacity, but instead a significant
shift from first-person motor imagery to third-person motor imagery. Mulder et al.
hypothesized that their results might be indicative of a relationship between ones level of
physical activity and motor imagery capacity. Support for a correlation between physical

See C. B. Corbin, The Effects of Covert Rehearsal on the Development of a


Complex Motor Skill, Journal of General Psychology 76 (1967): 143-50; R. A. Finke,
Principles of Mental Imagery, (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1989); and N. Ram et al.,
A Comparison of Modelling and Imagery in the Acquisition and Retention of Motor
Skills, Journal of Sports Sciences 25(5) (2007): 587-97.
336

T. Mulder et al., The Role of Motor Imagery in Learning a Totally Novel


Movement, Experimental Brain Research 154 (2004): 211-17.
337

T. Mulder, et al., Motor Imagery: The Relation Between Age and Imagery
Capacity, Human Movement Science 26 (2007): 203-11.
338

131
activity and motor image capacity does have support in the literature although the results
should be viewed with caution since some data is based on subjects self-reports.
Nevertheless, Colvin and Myers questioned 3,000 children regarding their imagery
abilities and reported that motor imagery was vivid only in children who were constantly
involved in movement experiences.339 Isaac and Marks found that females over 50 years
of age reported significantly less vivid movement imagery than other adults between the
ages of 20 and 50.340 Isaac and Marks suggested that the difference might stem from that
fact that the particular female population is typically not as active as either males of the
same age or younger age groups.
Aural feedback and aural representations
Several studies have highlighted the importance of aural feedback and aural
representations associated with music performance, facets of motor skill acquisition and
motor performance likely unique to musicians. As discussed previously, research by
Schn and Besson substantiates the likelihood that musicians have an auditory-like
representation of written music before they actually play it.341 Furthermore, their research
suggests that, while visuomotor coding may be sufficient to play written notes, an

S. S. Colvin and E. J. Myers, The Development of Imagination in School


Children and the Relation Between Ideational Types and the Retentivity of Material
Appealing to Various Sense Departments, Review Monographs 11 (1909): 85-125.
339

A. R. Isaac and D. F. Marks, Individual Differences in Imagery Experience:


Developmental Changes and Specialization, British Journal of Psychology 85 (1994):
479-500.
340

Schn and Besson, Visually Induced Auditory Expectancy, 694-705.

341

132
anticipated auditory representation of written music is important for an expressive
performance that assigns different significance to each note based upon its structural
function. Schn and Bessons research suggests that written music may induce both
musical auditory expectancy and motor expectancy. This in turn may point to the likely
subconscious use of auditory imagery and potential for its conscious use as well.
Observational learning
Recent research concerning the discovery of a mirror neuron system in humans
suggests the possible efficacy of observational learning. It is obvious with regard to
piano performance that only the external components of the playing mechanism are
observable. However, it seems clear from research concerning mirror neurons that the
human body automatically responds to the activities of a model and that the human mind
is capable of perceiving and inferring subtle relationships that are not readily observable.
The power of observational learning underscores some of the significant principles in
prominent learning theories suggesting the effectiveness of experiential learning prior to
cognitive conceptualization. For pianists, this suggests benefits associated with concert
attendance and modeling both in the classroom and the private studio.
Scales, piano literature, and the brain
As mentioned earlier, a 2005 study by Parsons et al. compared activated brain
networks of pianists performing both scales and the third movement of J.S. Bachs Italian
Concerto in F Major (BWV 971).342 Performance of the Bach occurred while

Parsons et al., The Brain Basis of Piano Performance, 199-215.

342

133
blindfolded. While there was significant correlation between brain areas activated in
performing scales and the Bach, there were also numerous activations unique to each.
In comparison to performance of scales, performance of the Bach was associated
with activation of subcortical areas including bilateral, predominantly right thalamus and
bilateral basal ganglia. Activation in somatomotor regions included bilateral dorsolateral
premotor cortex (BA6), bilateral primary motor cortex (BA 4), right insula, right SMA,
bilateral lingual gyrus (BA 19 and 18), bilateral posterior cingulate (BA 31 and 23), and
anterior and posterior cerebellum.
On the other hand, performance of scales resulted in strong activations in bilateral
anterior cingulate gyrus (BA 31 and 32), bilateral middle temporal cortex (BA 21), and
right superior temporal cortex (BA 41). In addition, activation was observed in right
frontal regions (BA 9 and 10), right tempoparietal regions (BA 39 and 40), right fusiform
gyrus (BA 37), left inferior frontal gyrus (BA 47), right precuneus (BA 7), and right
primary motor cortex (BA 4). Furthermore, increases in activation were observed in
particular areas of the anterior and posterior cerebellum.
Overall, Parsons et al. observed unexpected intensity and extent of deactivation
during the performance of Bach. In a conjoint measure of deactivation intensity and
extent (relative to rest), there was 43% greater deactivation throughout the brain during
the Bach performance than scales.343 The deactivated areas included frontal areas (BA 8,
9, and 44), posterior cingulate areas (BA 31), bilateral middle temporal,

Ibid.

343

134
parahippocampus, precuneus, and posterior cerebellum.344 Although some of the
aforementioned areas were deactivated during the performance of scales, they were
deactivated to a lesser extent. The observed differences in brain activity suggest
functions associated with the cortical and subcortical structures that may underlie playing
the piano and auditory perception.345
The preceding comparisons of activated networks are delimited by the interplay of
various differences in playing scales and the concerto. First, the performance of the
Bach piece requires recalling more complicated information than does scales. Effects
of this variable are probably apparent in the greater activation in auditory association
areas (BA 22 and 21), posterior cingulate, and cuneus and lingual areas. Second, the
concerto performance requires more intricate, controlled fingering and tone
production. This factor is likely reflected in increases in thalamus, basal ganglia, SMA,
insula, dorsolateral premotor cortex, and anterior cerebellum. Third, the concerto
performance requires vividly conveying a comprehension of the musical structure
(e.g., tonality, rhythm, dynamics, interpretative features, etc.). Effects of this factor
may be observed in auditory areas (BA 38, 22, and 21), posterior cerebellum, posterior
cingulate, cuneus, and lingual areas. Fourth, musical performance is associated with
emotional responses, which are likely much more limited when playing scales.
However, areas known to activate during emotional responses to music were not
appreciably active here. Nonetheless, it is possible that activations related to emotional
responses were in posterior cingulate, insula, and basal ganglia. Fifth, the concerto
performance demands more attention than scales. This factor may be reflected in
different ways here. There were no increases for the concerto in core attentional areas,
but the effects may be more diffuse because there was more detected activation overall
than for scales: nearly twice as many distinct foci and 72% greater overall extent of
activation. Moreover, there was nearly 50% greater deactivation overall for the
concerto performance than scales, an effect that may be related to a deepened focus of
attention, as discussed earlier. It is conceivable then that both the greater activations
and greater deactivations are related to differences in attention in the two
performances.346

Ibid.

344

Ibid.

345

Ibid., 212.

346

135
Discussion
There is significant indirect evidence to suggest that studying and performing
different types of exercises and piano literature results in distinct physiological
adaptations and brain activity. The implications could affect the ways in which pianists
practice and build technique. To that end, the aforementioned research by Parsons et al.
demonstrate significant differences in brain activity during performance of Bachs Italian
Concerto as opposed to scales.347 Results of research by Filimon et al. demonstrate an
overlap between executed, observed, and imagined reaching activations in the human
cortex.348 Furthermore, a growing number of studies have shown that many
neuropsychological and physiological similarities exist between physically executed and
imagined movements.349 These studies suggest that imagined and executed movements
are interrelated and dependent upon the characteristics of the musical task.

Ibid., 199-215.

347

Filimon et al., Human Cortical Representations for Reaching, 1315-28.

348

See J. Decety et al., Vegetative Response During Imagined Movement is


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349

136
Pascual-Leone demonstrated that, in comparison to subjects who practiced a
particular five-finger exercise over the course of 5 days, subjects who practiced for the
same amount of time but were not taught the 5-finger sequence displayed changes in
cortical motor output that were similar to but less significant than those who had learned
the sequence.350 This suggests effects associated with specificity of practice.
Collectively, this research may suggest a correlation between imagined
movements, executed movements, physiological adaptation, and cortical structure.
Applied to piano performance and practice, this may highlight the specificity of piano
literature and exercises and suggest the use of methods for developing aspects of
technique particular to them. Further direct research is needed, however. Areas of
interest might compare brain activity during the preparation, practice, and performance of
a broad variety of tudes and piano repertoire by pianists of different ages and levels of
experience.

Mental Practice Using Motor Imagery in Neurologic Rehabilitation, Archives of Physical


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Pascual-Leone et al., Modulation of Muscle Responses, 1037-45.

350

137
APPENDIX A: HENLE URTEXT EDITION PERMISSION
With kind permission, Figures 2-5, 7-18, and 21-23 are printed from the Henle Urtext
edition of Chopins Etudes, Copyright 1983 G. Henle Verlag, Munich .

138
APPENDIX B: WIENER URTEXT EDITION PERMISSION
With kind permission, Figures 1, 6, 19, and 20 are quoted from Frdric Chopin,
Smtliche Etden, hg. Von Paul Badura-Skoda, Wiener Urtext Edition, Wien 1973/2005
(UT 50205).

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