J Neurosci. 2003 Aug 6;23(18):7160-8.
The statistical structure of human speech sounds predicts musical
universals. Schwartz DA, Howe CQ, Purves D.
Department of Neurobiology and Center for Cognitive
Neuroscience, Duke University Medical Center, Duke University, Durham,
North Carolina 27710, USA.
The similarity of musical scales and consonance judgments
across human populations has no generally accepted explanation. Here we
present evidence that these aspects of auditory perception arise from the
statistical structure of naturally occurring periodic sound stimuli. An
analysis of speech sounds, the principal source of periodic sound stimuli
in the human acoustical environment, shows that the probability distribution
of amplitude-frequency combinations in human utterances predicts both the
structure of the chromatic scale and consonance ordering. These observations
suggest that what we hear is determined by the statistical relationship
between acoustical stimuli and their naturally occurring sources, rather
than by the physical parameters of the stimulus per se.
PMID: 12904476
J Neurosci. 2003 Jul 2;23(13):5545-52.
Enhancement of neuroplastic P2 and N1c auditory evoked
potentials in musicians. Shahin A, Bosnyak DJ, Trainor LJ, Roberts LE.
Unit of Medical Physics and Applied Radiation Sciences,
McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L8S 4K1.
P2 and N1c components of the auditory evoked potential
(AEP) have been shown to be sensitive to remodeling of the auditory cortex
by training at pitch discrimination in nonmusician subjects. Here, we investigated
whether these neuroplastic components of the AEP are enhanced in musicians
in accordance with their musical training histories. Highly skilled violinists
and pianists and nonmusician controls listened under conditions of passive
attention to violin tones, piano tones, and pure tones matched in fundamental
frequency to the musical tones. Compared with nonmusician controls, both
musician groups evidenced larger N1c (latency, 138 msec) and P2 (latency,
185 msec) responses to the three types of tonal stimuli. As in training
studies with nonmusicians, N1c enhancement was expressed preferentially
in the right hemisphere, where auditory neurons may be specialized for
processing of spectral pitch. Equivalent current dipoles fitted to the
N1c and P2 field patterns localized to spatially differentiable regions
of the secondary auditory cortex, in agreement with previous findings.
These results suggest that the tuning properties of neurons are modified
in distributed regions of the auditory cortex in accordance with the acoustic
training history (musical- or laboratory-based) of the subject. Enhanced
P2 and N1c responses in musicians need not be considered genetic or prenatal
markers for musical skill.
PMID: 12843255 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
J Neurosci. 1994 Apr;14(4):1908-19.
Neural mechanisms underlying melodic perception
and memory for pitch.
Zatorre RJ, Evans AC, Meyer E.
McConnell Brain Imaging Centre, Montreal Neurological
Institute, McGill University, Quebec, Canada.
The neural correlates of music perception were studied
by measuring cerebral blood flow (CBF) changes with positron emission tomography
(PET). Twelve volunteers were scanned using the bolus water method under
four separate conditions: (1) listening to a sequence of noise bursts,
(2) listening to unfamiliar tonal melodies, (3) comparing the pitch of
the first two notes of the same set of melodies, and (4) comparing the
pitch of the first and last notes of the melodies. The latter two conditions
were designed to investigate short-term pitch retention under low or high
memory load, respectively. Subtraction of the obtained PET images, superimposed
on matched MRI scans, provides anatomical localization of CBF changes associated
with specific cognitive functions. Listening to melodies, relative to acoustically
matched noise sequences, resulted in CBF increases in the right superior
temporal and right occipital cortices. Pitch judgments of the first two
notes of each melody, relative to passive listening to the same stimuli,
resulted in right frontal-lobe activation. Analysis of the high memory
load condition relative to passive listening revealed the participation
of a number of cortical and subcortical regions, notably in the right frontal
and right temporal lobes, as well as in parietal and insular cortex. Both
pitch judgment conditions also revealed CBF decreases within the left primary
auditory cortex. We conclude that specialized neural systems in the right
superior temporal cortex participate in perceptual analysis of melodies;
pitch comparisons are effected via a neural network that includes right
prefrontal cortex, but active retention of pitch involves the interaction
of right temporal and frontal cortices.
PMID: 8158246