Appendix 3.03 Survey of The Neurosciences
and Music III Conference 2008
Disorders and Plasticity
Title, Category
AimMus. Material, Cultural Ref.Technology & ProcedureMain focus of interestConclusion28S. Ross & Marks
(199
-204)
Absolutepitch in childrenCat. 1: PItch Cat. 9: Child development
29S. Schlaug et al.
(205
-208)
Training-inducedneuroplasticity in young children
Cat. 9: Child development
Cat. 10: Training
*30S. Strait et al.
(209-213)Musical experience and neural efficiency
Cat. 6: Infant sound
Cat. 8: Musicians
Cat. 19: EmotionTo test for Absolute Pitch (AP) in children with minimal musical experience
To investigate whether instrumental musical training would alter the development of interhemispheric connections through the corpus callosum (CC)
To understand how musical experience influences subcortical processing of emotionally salient sounds1) For note naming: 30 sinus
tones and 30 piano tones from the range of C2-C7.For nonmusical AP test:
2a) Asinustone followed by asilent interval. 2b) Asinustone followed by randomly generated interfering tones
CR: Neutral Private instrumental lessons
CR: Western
An emotionally charged complex vocalsound- an
infant’s unhappy cry
CR: Neutral2 children, aged 5 years, supposed to have AP. 15 control children, age 5-15 y.Tasks: 1) Name notes. 2) Reproduce the target tone by adjusting the knob of a digital sine function generator.
Repeat testing of the two AP children after 5 years
MRI scanning before andafter 30 months of instrumental training.
31 children, mean age 6,5 y. 18 attending music lessons:
11 piano, 7 string instruments.
13 controls: no training
Recording of Auditory Brainstem Response (ABR).
30 adults, ages 19-35 years.Groups:15 musicianswithmore than 10 years ofconsistent musical training.Asubgroup: 11 musicians who began musical training before 7 years of age.
15NonmusiciansHypothesis: The salient identifying feature of AP is the ability to encode durable representations of the chroma of periodic stimuli
Four areas of CC that could plausibly be affected by musical training since they contain fibers projecting to sensory and motor cortical regions
The effect of musical experience, probably a sharpening of subcortical auditory processing, resulting in fine neural tuning to acoustic features important for vocal communicationData suggest that while the ability tonamenotes isdependent on learned associations, AP can be a result of the ability toencodemeaningful representations of chroma independent of experience
Early, intensive, and prolonged skill learningleads to significant structural changes in theanterior midbody of the CC, which connects premotor and supplementary motor areas of the two hemispheres
Musical training engenders subcortical efficiency that is connected with acoustic features integral to the communication of emotion