Appendix 3.04 Survey of
The Neurosciences and Music I
V
Conference 2011
Learning and Memory
Title, CategoryAimMus. Material, Cultural Ref.Technology & ProcedureMain focus of interestConclusion- Peter Pfordresher
Effects of musical training on the role of auditory feedback during music performance
Cat. 10: Training
Cat. 17: Sensory
-motor- Amir Lahav
Seeing what you hear and hearing what you do: audiovisual interactions in music learning and rehabilitation
Cat. 10: Learning
Cat. 16: Audiovisual
25. Caroline Palmer
Contextual influences on performers’ memory retrieval processes
Cat. 8: Musicians
Cat. 14
: Memory- María Herrojo Ruiz
Error prediction and action control during piano performance in healthy and dystonic pianists
Cat. 11: Deficit Cat. 17: Sensory
-motorTo discuss research concerning the importance of auditory feedback, the sounds one creates, to performance. Specifically to consider the basis of audio-motorassociations that lead to effects of altering auditory feedback
Todescribe studies of how
the action-recognitionsystemresponds to sound in the
context of music learning andrehabilitationI describe a formal, graded model of distributed contextual memory retrieval of real-time music performance,
based on the primary feature of incremental planning
To present findings that shed new light on the neural mechanisms which might implement motor prediction by means of forward control processes, as they function in healthy pianists and in their altered form in patients with musician’s dystoniaTwo groups of non-musicianswere trained to play piano music by ear; one groupreceived uninterrupted audiovisual feedback, while the other group only heard, but could notsee their handon the keyboard
A series of experiments with highly skilled and less skilledperformers in which the model accounts for patterns of serial ordering errors,speed/accuracy tradeoffs, etc.
EEG studies of the neural underpinnings of error detection during theretrievalof music from memoryRecent results challenge the
notion that auditory-motorassociations in music performance are based onlearned, task-specificassociations. These may have a more abstract basis, generalto a broad range ofmotor tasks
fMRI studies with a similar task support the hypothesis of a “hearing- doing” neural
system that is highly dependent on the individual’s motor repertoire and gets established rapidly
Performers have access to a subset of contextual sequence events that have formed strong interconnections, during practice, with the event currently being performed
A negative event-relatedpotential (ERP) triggeredinthe posterior frontomedial cortex (pFMC) 70 ms before performance errors (incorrectkeypress) was reportedRecent research suggests that the neural network
underlying auditory-motorassociations includes the inferior frontal gyrus and the cerebellum, both of whichserve a broad range of motorand perceptual tasks
Subjects who were deprived of visual information showed significantly poorer auditory recognition of pitches from the
musical piece they had learned
Model applications account for memory activation that isdistributed incrementally
among tones
This ERP component,termedpre-error related negativity
(preERN),was assumed toreflect processes of error detection in advance. The present paper aims to examine that interpretation and address furtherquestions