Music Listening, Music Therapy, Phenomenology and Neuroscience

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

Appendix 3.01 Survey of The Neurosciences and Music I



  • Conference 2002


Part I:

Poster Papers

Title, Category

Aim

Mus. Material, Cultural Ref.

Technology & Procedure

Main focus of interest

Conclusion

14P. Bey & Zatorre (152-

154)

Interleaved Melodies
Cat

. 1: Melody
15P. Brattico et al. (155-


157)

Electrical Brain Responses to Music
Cat

. 2: Harmony
16P. Brattico et al. (158-


160)

Acquired Deafness to Dissonance
Cat

. 2: Consonance


/

Dissonance
Cat. 11:

Deficit

Neural basis of auditory stream segregation
Neural correlates of aesthetic vs. descriptive listening of the same musical cadences
Distinction beween consonant and dissonant intervals by a patient and cont

rol subjects

Two unfamiliar six

-tone

melodies, one with distractor tones

(SNI)

CR:

Western
180 five

-chord cadences. 10

with correct, 10 with ambiguous, 10 with incorrect ending

(SNI)

CR: Western
Two sets of four intervals: a ”consonant” and a ”dis

sonant”

context

(SNI)

CR: Neutral

fMRI. Decide whether the melodies are identical or different. 8 listeners
15 nonmusicians.
EEG while listening. Judging tasks: correct / incorrect or like / dislike
One patient, who had bilateral lesions in the auditory cortex, but intact hearing.
EEG while listening

Difference if the target melody is presented before or after the melody with distractor tones?
Activated neural resources, especially right frontocentral negativity
Effects of patient’s

bilateral

lesions in the auditory cortex
Event

-Related Potentials

(ERP

), Mismatch N

egativity

(MMN)

Similar cortical networks involved in both conditions
More neural resources are devoted to prepare an evaluative (aesthetic) listening The electrical brain responses did not differentiate

be

tween

dissonance and consonance

.

Neural substrates underlying MMN generation are altered by patient’s brain lesions.

P: indicates a short poster paper, e.g. 14P
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