Miranda Robbin A, Ullman Michael T
Brain and Language Laboratory, Department of Neuroscience, Georgetown University, New Research Building, 3970 Reservoir Road, NW, Washington, DC 20057, USA.
Neuroimage. 2007 Nov 1;38(2):331-45. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2007.07.034. Epub 2007 Aug 8.
Language and music share a number of characteristics. Crucially, both domains depend on both rules and memorized representations. Double dissociations between the neurocognition of rule-governed and memory-based knowledge have been found in language but not music. Here, the neural bases of both of these aspects of music were examined with an event-related potential (ERP) study of note violations in melodies. Rule-only violations consisted of out-of-key deviant notes that violated tonal harmony rules in novel (unfamiliar) melodies. Memory-only violations consisted of in-key deviant notes in familiar well-known melodies; these notes followed musical rules but deviated from the actual melodies. Finally, out-of-key notes in familiar well-known melodies constituted violations of both rules and memory. All three conditions were presented, within-subjects, to healthy young adults, half musicians and half non-musicians. The results revealed a double dissociation, independent of musical training, between rules and memory: both rule violation conditions, but not the memory-only violations, elicited an early, somewhat right-lateralized anterior-central negativity (ERAN), consistent with previous studies of rule violations in music, and analogous to the early left-lateralized anterior negativities elicited by rule violations in language. In contrast, both memory violation conditions, but not the rule-only violation, elicited a posterior negativity that might be characterized as an N400, an ERP component that depends, at least in part, on the processing of representations stored in long-term memory, both in language and in other domains. The results suggest that the neurocognitive rule/memory dissociation extends from language to music, further strengthening the similarities between the two domains.
语言和音乐具有许多共同特征。至关重要的是,这两个领域都依赖于规则和记忆表征。在语言领域已发现基于规则的知识和基于记忆的知识在神经认知方面存在双重分离,但在音乐领域尚未发现。在此,通过一项针对旋律中音符违规情况的事件相关电位(ERP)研究,对音乐这两个方面的神经基础进行了考察。仅违反规则的情况由新颖(不熟悉)旋律中违反音调和谐规则的离调异常音符组成。仅违反记忆的情况由熟悉的知名旋律中的同调异常音符组成;这些音符遵循音乐规则,但偏离了实际旋律。最后,熟悉的知名旋律中的离调音符构成了对规则和记忆的双重违反。所有这三种情况均以被试内设计呈现给健康的年轻成年人,其中一半是音乐家,一半是非音乐家。结果显示,在规则和记忆之间存在一种与音乐训练无关的双重分离:两种违反规则的情况均引发了一种早期的、略向右偏侧化的前中央负波(ERAN),这与先前关于音乐中违反规则的研究一致,并且类似于语言中违反规则所引发的早期向左偏侧化的前负波。相比之下,两种违反记忆的情况均引发了一种后负波,可能被表征为N400,这是一种ERP成分,至少部分依赖于对存储在长期记忆中的表征的处理,在语言和其他领域均是如此。研究结果表明,神经认知规则/记忆分离从语言扩展到了音乐,进一步强化了这两个领域之间的相似性。