TY - JOUR PY - 2023// TI - Should we turn off the music? Music with lyrics interferes with cognitive tasks JO - Journal of cognition A1 - Souza, Alessandra S. A1 - Leal Barbosa, Luís Carlos SP - e24 EP - e24 VL - 6 IS - 1 N2 - People often listen to music while doing cognitive tasks. Yet, whether music harms or helps performance is still debated. Here, we assessed the objective and subjective effects of music with and without lyrics on four cognitive tasks. College students completed tasks of verbal and visual memory, reading comprehension, and arithmetic under three conditions: silence, instrumental music, and music with lyrics. Participants judged their learning during and after each condition. Music with lyrics hindered verbal memory, visual memory, and reading comprehension (d ≈ -0.3), whereas its negative effect (d = -.19) on arithmetic was not credible. Instrumental music (hip-hop lo-fi) did not credibly hinder or improve performance. Participants were aware of the detrimental impact of the lyrics. Instrumental music was, however, sometimes perceived as beneficial. Our results corroborate the general distracting effect of background music. However, faulty metacognition about music's interfering effect cannot fully explain why students often listen to music while studying.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 2514-4820 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/joc.273 ID - ref1 ER -