Appendix 3.04 Survey of
The Neurosciences and Music I
V
Conference 2011
Learning and Memory
Symposium 2:IMPACT OF MUSICAL EXPERIENCE ON CEREBRAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING(12-15)Title, CategoryAimMus. Material, Cultural Ref.Technology & ProcedureMain focus of interestConclusion- Nina Kraus, Dana Strait, A. Parbery-Clark Musical training shapes functional brain networks for selective
auditory attentionand hearing speech in noise
Cat. 6: Language
Cat. 13: Attention- Daniele Schön
Music training for the development of speech segmentation
Cat. 6: Language
Cat. 10: Training
14. Martin Meyer
Brain responses to rapidly changing aco
usticmodulations in spoken language vary as a function of musical expertise
Cat. 6: Language
Cat. 8: Musicians- Aniruddh Patel
Presented by M. Oechslin
Why would musical training benefit the neural encoding of speech?
The OPERAhypothesis
Cat. 6: LanguageCat. 10: TrainingTo investigate the ability
of the nervous system to lock on to patterns in a target signal (i.e., the characteristics of aspeaker’s voice;statistical regularities) and suppress competing noise We compared learning based on speech sequences to learning based on sung sequences.
Then we studied how linguistic and musical information are learned using a sung material
To determine to what extent musical expertise leads to altered neural mechanisms underlying the perception of rapidly changing temporal information available in the auditory speech signal, such as the voice onset time in stop consonants
Evidence suggests that musical training benefits the neural encoding of speech. This presentation offers a hypothesis specifying why,and under what circum-stances, such benefits occurCoupling behavioralmethodsto EEG recordings and comparing musicians withnonmusicians
Event-related brain potentialstudy: Native speakers of German, musicians and nonmusicians, were presentedwith voiced and unvoiced CV syllables as well as with nonspeech noise analoguesBrain networks associated with auditory attention and workingmemory sharpen theneural encoding of a target
signal, highlight patterns, suppress competingsoundsandenhance perceptual
performance
Adults and infants can use the statistical properties of syllable sequences to extract words from continuous speech. Moreover, such a statistical learning ability can also operate with nonlinguistic stimuli such as tonesProficient musicians transfer their auditory skills to the language domain, in particular when supra- segmental
modulations aredecoded. Dotransfer effects also occur at the subsyllabicsegmentallevel?
The “OPERA” hypothesis
proposes that such benefits are driven by adaptive plasticity in speechprocessing networks, and that this plasticity occurs when five conditions are metWe provide evidence that sustained musical
experience confers cognitive, perceptual and biological advantages that undergird the hearing and neural encoding of speech inbackgroundnoise throughout the life span
1)Performance is better with
sung compared to spokenmaterial. 2) Using sungmaterial, the linguistic
structure is better learned
than the musical structure. Musical expertise facilitates
learning of both linguistic andmusical structures
Strong evidence that musical expertise facilitates the processing of sub-segmentalcues in the speech signal by altering the functional organization of the humanauditory system
The five conditions are:
1)Overlap in brain networks
2)Precision of processing
3)Emotion elicited by music
4)Repetition
5)Attention