Bender Institute of Neuroimaging, University of Giessen, Germany.
Brain Res. 2011 Jul 21;1402:80-92. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2011.05.057. Epub 2011 May 30.
Many studies investigating music processing in adult musicians and nonmusicians point towards pronounced behavioral and neurophysiological differences between the two groups. Recent studies indicate that these differences can already be found in early childhood. Further, electro-encephalography studies using musical discrimination tasks have demonstrated that differences in music processing become more pronounced when explicitly rather than implicitly trained musical abilities are required. Exploring the functional neuroanatomy underlying the processing of different expectation violations in children and its association with musical training, we investigated neural responses to different melodic deviances in musically trained and untrained children. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, children (aged 11-14 years) were examined while comparing pairs of short melodies that were either identical or differed with respect to four notes. The implemented deviances were either subtle (by inserting plausible in-key notes) or obvious (by inserting implausible out-of-key notes). Our results indicate a strong association between musical training and functional neuroanatomy of the brain. Similar to research on music processing in adults, the processing of obvious melodic deviances activated a network involving inferior frontal, premotor and anterior insula regions in musically trained and untrained children. By contrast, subtle deviances led to activation in the inferior frontal and premotor cortex, the anterior insula, the superior temporal gyrus, and the supramarginal gyrus in musically trained children only. Our work provides further insights into the functional neuroanatomy of melody processing and its association with musical training in children, providing the basis for further studies specifying distinct musical processes (e.g. contour and interval processing).
许多研究调查了成年音乐家和非音乐家的音乐处理能力,指出这两组人群之间存在明显的行为和神经生理学差异。最近的研究表明,这些差异早在儿童早期就已经存在。此外,使用音乐辨别任务的脑电图研究表明,当需要明确而非隐含的音乐能力时,音乐处理的差异变得更加明显。为了探索儿童对不同期望违反的处理的功能神经解剖学基础及其与音乐训练的关系,我们研究了受过音乐训练和未受过音乐训练的儿童对不同旋律偏差的神经反应。使用功能磁共振成像,对年龄在 11-14 岁的儿童进行了检查,他们在比较两对短旋律时,要么完全相同,要么在四个音符上有所不同。所实施的偏差要么细微(通过插入合理的调内音符),要么明显(通过插入不合理的调外音符)。我们的研究结果表明,音乐训练与大脑的功能神经解剖学之间存在很强的关联。与成人音乐处理的研究类似,明显的旋律偏差处理激活了一个网络,包括受过音乐训练和未受过音乐训练的儿童的下额叶、前运动皮层和前岛叶区域。相比之下,细微的偏差只导致受过音乐训练的儿童的下额叶和前运动皮层、前岛叶、颞上回和缘上回的激活。我们的工作进一步深入了解了旋律处理的功能神经解剖学及其与儿童音乐训练的关系,为进一步研究特定的音乐过程(例如旋律和音程处理)提供了基础。