Music Listening, Music Therapy, Phenomenology and Neuroscience

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

Appendix 3.01 Survey of The Neurosciences and Music I



  • Conference 2002


Part II: Poster Papers
Title, Category

Aim

Mus. Material, Cultural Ref.

Technology & Procedure

Main focus of interest

Conclusion

41P. Khalfa et al. (374

-376)

Music, stress, and salivary cortisol
Cat

. 18:


Bodily impact

42P. Lancelot et al.

(377

-380)

Temporal lobe resection in short-

term memory

Cat

. 6: Animal sounds
Cat. 14: Memory
43P. Quoniam et al.
(381


-384)
Melodic memory in
Alzheimer’s disease

(AD)

and

depression
Cat

. 11: Deficit
Cat. 14: Memory 44P. Gaab and Schlaug
(385


-388)
Brain activation in musicians
Cat

. 1: Melody
Cat
. 8: Musicians


Effect of relaxing music for recovery after a psychologically stressful task To investigate auditory spatial and non

-spatial short-

term

memory

(STM)

Impact of emotional deficits on implicit and explicit memory
Different brain activation in musicians and non

-musicians

Recordings:

Relaxing

music

excerpts from Enya, Vangelis and Yanni

via loudspeakers

CR: Western popular Bird songs
CR: Nature
Novel but conventional melodies

(SNI)

CR: Western
Sequences of 6

-7 tones

(SNI)

CR: Not indicated

24 francophone male university students. Measurement of salivary cortisol before and after stressful task
Patients: 9 had undergone right, 10 h

ad undergone left

temporal lobe resection.
Two tasks: 1) Auditory object discrimination: same or different? 2)

Location

discrimination:
Identical or

different?

10 AD patients, 10 depressed patients, 16 controls.
1) Study phase: Presentation of melodies 1, 5 or 10 times. 2) Preference task
3) Recognition task
10 musicians, 10 non





musicians.
Sparse fMRI during

pitch

memory task: same or different?

Difference between music listening and silence during recovery period
Difference

be

tween p

atients

with left and right temporal lobe removal
Differences between
Alz

heimer’s disease patients
and elderly depressed patients
Localization of brain activation

Cortisol

in the saliva

decreased more rapidly

in

subjects exposed to music
Right temporal

lesions:

impaired object discrimination.
Left temporal lesions: impaired location discrimination
Impaired recognition in Alzheimer patients.
Impaired emotional processing of positive stimuli in depressed patients
Musicians: greater right posterior

temporal activat

ion.

Non

-musicians: greater
activation of left secon

dary

auditory cortex

Explicit memory:

Memory in which there is a need for conscious recollection in order to recall something.

By contrast, in

implicit memory

there is a lack of conscious awareness in the act of recollection.

Priming

is an

implicit memory

effect: Exposure to a

stimulus

influences response to a subsequent stimulus
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