Appendix 3.04 Survey of
The Neurosciences and Music I
V
Conference 2011
Learning and Memory
Title, Category
Aim
Mus. Material, Cultural Ref.
Technology &
Procedure
Main focus of interest
Conclusion
Steven Demorest, Lee Osterhout and Ramesh Gangolli ERP responses to cross
cultural music expectancy violations
Cat. 1: Melody
Cat. 7: Culture 21. Patrick Wong, Alice Chan, and Elizabeth Hellmuth
Margulis
The bimusical brain
Cat. 7: Culture
We examined listeners’ sensitivity to expectancy
violations across different cultures using Event
Rela
ted Potential (ERP)
methodology
Investigation of the effects
of
passive exposure on our nervous system without active use. Evaluation of how the brain acquires multiple symbolic systems by studying listeners who have exposure to more than one musical system
US
-born and Indian-born
subjects heard a series of 30 melodies taken from Western folk melodies
and 30 from
Indian ragas.
Western and Indian music
ERP responses to musical violations. Each melody was presented randomly in blocks by culture and was heard in both its original and violated form
fMRI study: listeners who had been exposed to Wester
n-
only (mono-
musicals), and
both Indian and Western musical systems (bimusicals) since childhood made tension (affective) judgment on Western and Indian music
The P600 response found in previous
work in both music
and language: Variation based on the
cul
tural
background of the listener
Effects predominantly driven by between
-music differences
in temporal regions in the mono-
musicals and by
between
-music differences in
limbic regions in the bimusicals
Preliminary results: Western listeners were sensitive to expectancy violations within their own culture, but showed no significant response to violations
within the Indian
music context Connectivity analysis of
network
s via structural
equation modeling (SEM) showed
a higher
degree of
connectivity and la
rger
differentiation
between the
music conditions within the
bimusicals
Symposium 4:
MEMORY AND LEARNING IN MUSIC PERFORMANCE
(22
-26)
Title, Category
Aim
Mus. Material, Cultural Ref.
Technology & Procedure
Main focus
of interest
Conclusion
22.
Virginia Penhune
Sensitive period effects for musical training
Cat. 9: Child development
Cat. 10: Training
Comparing the performance of early
- (before age seven)
and late
-trained (after age
seven) musicians who were mat
ched for training and
experience on a variety of tasks of musical skill
Auditory and visual rhythm reproduction
A sensitive period: a time
during development when experience has a differential effect on later behaviour and on brain development
The re
sults demonstrate that
early musical training can have long
-lasting
effects on
adult music performance, and that early training may also be related to spec
ific changes in
brain structure