Department of Psychology, Neuroscience and Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada L8S 4K1;Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Harvard Medical School/Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02129;
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience and Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada L8S 4K1;McMaster Institute for Music and the Mind, Hamilton, ON, Canada L8S 4K1;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Jul 15;111(28):10383-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1402039111. Epub 2014 Jun 30.
The auditory environment typically contains several sound sources that overlap in time, and the auditory system parses the complex sound wave into streams or voices that represent the various sound sources. Music is also often polyphonic. Interestingly, the main melody (spectral/pitch information) is most often carried by the highest-pitched voice, and the rhythm (temporal foundation) is most often laid down by the lowest-pitched voice. Previous work using electroencephalography (EEG) demonstrated that the auditory cortex encodes pitch more robustly in the higher of two simultaneous tones or melodies, and modeling work indicated that this high-voice superiority for pitch originates in the sensory periphery. Here, we investigated the neural basis of carrying rhythmic timing information in lower-pitched voices. We presented simultaneous high-pitched and low-pitched tones in an isochronous stream and occasionally presented either the higher or the lower tone 50 ms earlier than expected, while leaving the other tone at the expected time. EEG recordings revealed that mismatch negativity responses were larger for timing deviants of the lower tones, indicating better timing encoding for lower-pitched compared with higher-pitch tones at the level of auditory cortex. A behavioral motor task revealed that tapping synchronization was more influenced by the lower-pitched stream. Results from a biologically plausible model of the auditory periphery suggest that nonlinear cochlear dynamics contribute to the observed effect. The low-voice superiority effect for encoding timing explains the widespread musical practice of carrying rhythm in bass-ranged instruments and complements previously established high-voice superiority effects for pitch and melody.
听觉环境通常包含几个时间上重叠的声源,而听觉系统将复杂的声波分解成代表各种声源的流或声道。音乐也常常是复调的。有趣的是,主旋律(频谱/音高信息)通常由最高音的声道承载,而节奏(时间基础)通常由最低音的声道奠定。以前使用脑电图(EEG)的工作表明,在两个同时发出的音调或旋律中,听觉皮层对较高音调的音高编码更为稳健,而建模工作表明,这种高音优势源于感觉外围。在这里,我们研究了在较低音调的声道中承载节奏时间信息的神经基础。我们在等时流中呈现高音和低音同时发出的音调,偶尔会使较高或较低的音调比预期提前 50 毫秒出现,而让另一个音调保持在预期时间。EEG 记录显示,对于较低音调的时间偏差,失匹配负波反应更大,表明与高音相比,听觉皮层对低音的时间编码更好。一项基于生物合理性的听觉外围模型的行为运动任务表明,轻拍同步受较低音流的影响更大。结果表明,耳蜗非线性动力学对观察到的效应有贡献。对于编码时间,低音声道具有优势效应,这解释了在低音乐器中承载节奏的广泛音乐实践,并补充了以前建立的高音优势效应,用于音高和旋律。