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 interestConclusion38S. Grimaul et al.
(273-277)Acoustic short-term memoryfor pitch
Cat. 1: Pitch
Cat. 14: Memory
39S. Groussard et al.
(278
-281)
Neural correlates underlying musical semantic memory Cat. 13: Recognition
Cat. 14: Memory
40S. Pecenka & Keller
(282
-286)
Auditory imagery and musical synchronization
Cat.14: Auditory imagery
Cat. 17: Sensory-motor41S.Tew et al.(287-290)Melody representation in infants
Cat. 1: Melody
Cat. 9: Child development
42S. Vanstone et al.
(291
-294)
Preservation of memory fortunes and lyrics
Cat. 11: Deficit Cat. 14: MemoryTo characterize acoustic short-term memory (ASTM)at the functional and neuronal level by the use of fMRI and MEG
Using PET imaging to determine the neural substrates that underlie musical semantic memory, using different tasks and stimuli To investigate the contribution of auditory imagery abilities to basic sensorimotor synchronization (SMS) processes in musicians
To compare molodic encoding in auditory cortex in infants and adults using Electroencephalography (EEG) 4 studies of elderly persons with distinctive patterns of memory for tunes and lyrics of songs, in contrast to neurologicimpairments: deafness,
right-hemisphere stroke, andAlzheimer’s DementiaTwo sequences of tones separated by a silent retention interval. Varying memory load: 1,3, or 5 tones in sequence. (SNI)
CR: Neutral 1)Oboe timbre:2,5 secmonophonic melodies. 2) Flute timbre: 5 sec monophonic sequences 3)Flutetimbre: First part of familiar melodies. CR:
WesternTarget tones: 3 complex tones, base frequencies 261, 392, 523 Hz. Probe tones:
Chosen randomly between200 and 1200 Hz.CR: NeutralTones synthesized in grand piano timbre. 4-tone melodiespresented in 20 transpositions. 80% Standard melodies, 20% Deviant:lastnote raised by a semitone
CR: Western
Recorded music:
1) Familiarity Decision test for Tunes (FDT): 10 familiar melodies, 10 foils. 2) Familiar lyrics test (FLT) analogoustoFDT. 3) Lyrics prompt test (LPT): Spoken lyrics from familiar tunes. CR: WesternWithout regard to musical training or ability: 1) fMRI: 15 subjects. 2) MEG: 7 subjects. Same / different task
PET imaging during tasks:
1) Familiar or not?N = 92) Familiaror not?N = 123)N = 12Decide whether thesecond part of melody matched the first.All tasksfollowed byreference tasks20 musicians, varying degree of experience. Tasks: A) Adjust probe tone to match target, or compare probe and target pitch. S) Three beattapping tasks
5 nonmusician adults. 17
infants, mean age 6,3 months watched silent movie or puppet show during recording of EEG
4 cases and 90 elderly healthy controls. After Mini-Mental Status Examination
(MMSE), performance of tasks: 1 & 2) Indicate familiarity or not. 3) Sing tune afterlistening to spoken lyrics
.To identify brain areas that responded in an increasing fashion with increasing memory load
Semantic memory: the ability to identify familiar melodies.
Episodic memory: the ability to recognize a musical excerpt for whichthe contextofits former encounter (when,
where, how) can be recalled
A) Auditory imagery acuity S) Sensorimotor synchronization (SMS)
Mismatch negativity (MMN) response to pitch changes in infants and adults
Retained memory for tunes and lyrics in spite of
impairments: profound deafness (age 90), righthemispere stroke (age 77), severe Alzheimer (age 85), moderate Alzheimer (age 83)Both analyses revealed brain activations that varied with memory load in the vicinity of secondary auditorycortex,Brodmann area(BA) 22andsuperior parietal cortex (BA 5/7)
Clinical and neuroimaging data suggest that the musical lexicon (and musical semanticmemory) is sustained by a temporo-prefrontal networkinvolving right and left hemispheres
Auditory imagery and SMSabilities were positively correlated with one another and with musical experience.
SMS ability only partially mediated by musical ability Both infants and adults showed cortical response to a change in relative pitch. Differences: Adults showed a right, frontally negative MMN, infantsexhibited a slowpositive vawe
Results suggest that memory for tunes and lyrics may be particularly resistant to the ravages of neurological disorder. Discussion of models of brain organization for musical memory