Auditory stimulation with Mozart sonata k-448 and heavy metal music improves short-term memory in rats

Autor: Paulo José Oliveira Cortez, Iara Silva Leite, Joao Lucas de Los Rios Leal, Ana Clara Mauad Coli, Cesar Renato Sartori, Rodolfo Souza de Faria, Dalmo Antonio Ribero Moreira, David M. Garner, Amanda Mourino de Faraco, Marilia Pires de Souza e Silva, Victor E. Valenti, Clarissa Trzesniak, Joice Anaize Tonon do Amaral
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Zdroj: Open Science Journal. 5
ISSN: 2466-4308
DOI: 10.23954/osj.v5i4.2620
Popis: OBJECTIVES: We aimed to assess the effect of both classical and heavy metal music on short-term and long-term memory.METHODS: Male rats were separated into three groups: Mozart (n=14), rats were exposed to Mozart´s K-448 piano sonata; Heavy Metal (n=15), rats were exposed to Psychosocial (band: Slipknot), and Control (n=12), rats were exposed to ambient sounds in an acoustically isolated room. The animals were exposed to the music for 8 hours per day, between 10:00 pm to 06:00 am, with an intensity of 50-75 dB, for 61 consecutive days. Twenty-four hours after the final day of adjustment to the enclosure the animals were individually exposed for 5 minutes in the enclosure to explore two identical objects. Ninety minutes after the object recognition training session, the animals were submitted to the short-term memory test and twenty-eight days after the object recognition training session, the animals were submitted to a long-term memory test.RESULTS: There was no modification amongst the three groups during the object recognition training. Regarding the short-term memory test both Mozart (U=33.00, p=0.016, FDR-corrected) and Heavy Metal (U=44.00, p=0.033, FDR-corrected) groups revealed a higher percentage value of significance compared to the control group. In contrast, there was no significant change in relation to the long-term memory test.CONCLUSION: Mozart Sonata K-448 and heavy metal music achieved beneficial effects on the short-term memory in rats.
Databáze: OpenAIRE