The New Zealand Herald

Special song can break through fog of dementia

Musical memories serve to build and maintain social relationsh­ips, write Amee Baird and Bill Thompson

- Amee Baird is clinical neuropsych­ologist and NHMRC-ARC dementia research developmen­t fellow at Macquarie University Bill Thompson is chief investigat­or in the ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders at Macquarie University

Many couples have a special song — “our song” — that reminds them of a significan­t event or time in their relationsh­ip, such as when they first met, their wedding or when they were separated by war.

These songs are a powerful way of reconnecti­ng with their shared personal memories and the emotions that go with them. They are a type of shared or autobiogra­phical memory triggered by music; they work as a “mental glue” for a couple’s shared identity.

Despite how common these songs are, there is surprising­ly limited research on musicevoke­d autobiogra­phical memories. There are, however, numerous anecdotal and film references to the power of “our songs” to bring people back to themselves and to reconnect with others, particular­ly in dementia.

While we often think of couples having a special song, close friends and family members can also have a shared song.

The film Moonlight provides a dramatic representa­tion of this. In this winner of Best Picture at the 2017 Academy Awards, high school friends Chiron and Kevin enjoy listening together to the song Hello Stranger by Barbara Lewis.

They have an intense friendship during a challengin­g time for Chiron. He was bullied at school, and received little support from his drugaddict­ed mother.

Many years go by, and they drift apart. But when Kevin hears the song again it brings back powerful memories of their friendship. He phones Chiron in the middle of the night, and Chiron decides to drive all the way to the town where Kevin is, showing up at the restaurant where he works. And in a memorable scene of their reunion, Kevin puts on their song.

Through the ages and despite dementia

For people who share a significan­t song with someone, the effects can be powerful and persistent, retaining meaning well into older age, even in the face of cognitive decline that occurs in dementia.

In people with dementia associated with Alzheimer’s disease, a neurodegen­erative condition causing impaired memory, musical abilities and memory for music can remain “an island of preservati­on” in an otherwise cognitivel­y impaired person.

There are striking cases of people in the severe stage of Alzheimer’s dementia who can continue not only to remember “our song”, but also play their musical instrument, even land a recording deal, and learn and recall new music, despite no formal music training.

How is this possible? Neuroimagi­ng research shows music provides a “super stimu- In the film together to the song friends Chiron and Kevin enjoy listening by Barbara Lewis. lus” for the brain. It activates widespread brain regions, including parts controllin­g movement, emotion and memory.

Familiar and favourite songs can also powerfully engage the frontal regions of the brain, which are typically spared from damage in people with Alzheimer’s disease.

This means music can trigger memories in a way no other catalyst can.

Music can provide a crucially important link to an individual’s past, and provide a means of reconnecti­ng to a shared past.

Music can be more powerful than photograph­s

In our research on people with Alzheimer’s dementia, we have found music is more effective at triggering personal memories than other cues, such as photograph­s.

Songs from the “reminiscen­ce bump”, an age that extends from adolescenc­e to early adulthood, are most likely to trigger music-evoked autobiogra­phical memories.

Timing is crucial. This is a time when many people are establishi­ng their self-identity, and often find their first partner or spouse.

This means if couples met early in life, they may be more likely to have laid down a special song during their “reminiscen­ce bump”. This was the case for high school sweetheart­s Barbara and David, who took part in our yet-to-be published research (names changed).

Barbara was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s dementia five years ago and often became confused and agitated.

Sometimes, she wouldn’t even recognise her husband David. When she accused him of being an intruder and chased him out of their family home, David had no idea how he could make her understand he was her partner of nearly 60 years.

He now says it was the power of song that brought Barbara back to him.

On the night they first met, they danced to the last song of the evening, Unchained Melody, by the Righteous Brothers.

He began singing this to her every day, and eventually “she came back”, and the episodes of her failing to recognise him have stopped. The couple had heeded the lyrics: “I’ll be coming home, wait for me”.

Music exists in all known cultures. Some researcher­s say it has persisted throughout evolution as a crucial ingredient for social cohesion.

As with this bonding function, the types of memories music most commonly evokes tend to build and maintain social relationsh­ips.

Regardless of whether people have dementia, musicevoke­d autobiogra­phical memories are typically reminiscen­t of a special other, often a current or ex-partner, or of a time of socialisin­g during a period of life, such as high school dances or wartime romances.

In this way, all songs have the potential to be “our songs”, and given the importance of social bonds for people of all ages and throughout human history, we may even owe our survival to them.

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