Concepedia

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Neural mechanisms underlying melodic perception and memory for pitch

878

Citations

38

References

1994

Year

TLDR

The study aimed to examine short‑term pitch retention under low and high memory loads during melodic perception. Cerebral blood flow changes were measured with PET in 12 volunteers across four listening and pitch‑judgment conditions, and PET images were co‑registered with MRI to localize activity. Melody listening activated right superior temporal and occipital cortices, while pitch‑comparison tasks engaged right frontal and temporal regions and, under high load, additional parietal and insular areas; both tasks suppressed left primary auditory cortex, indicating that right‑lateralized networks support melodic perception and pitch retention.

Abstract

The neural correlates of music perception were studied by measuring cerebral blood flow (CBF) changes with positron emission tomography (PET). Twelve volunteers were scanned using the bolus water method under four separate conditions: (1) listening to a sequence of noise bursts, (2) listening to unfamiliar tonal melodies, (3) comparing the pitch of the first two notes of the same set of melodies, and (4) comparing the pitch of the first and last notes of the melodies. The latter two conditions were designed to investigate short-term pitch retention under low or high memory load, respectively. Subtraction of the obtained PET images, superimposed on matched MRI scans, provides anatomical localization of CBF changes associated with specific cognitive functions. Listening to melodies, relative to acoustically matched noise sequences, resulted in CBF increases in the right superior temporal and right occipital cortices. Pitch judgments of the first two notes of each melody, relative to passive listening to the same stimuli, resulted in right frontal-lobe activation. Analysis of the high memory load condition relative to passive listening revealed the participation of a number of cortical and subcortical regions, notably in the right frontal and right temporal lobes, as well as in parietal and insular cortex. Both pitch judgment conditions also revealed CBF decreases within the left primary auditory cortex. We conclude that specialized neural systems in the right superior temporal cortex participate in perceptual analysis of melodies; pitch comparisons are effected via a neural network that includes right prefrontal cortex, but active retention of pitch involves the interaction of right temporal and frontal cortices.

References

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