Stupacher Jan, Wood Guilherme, Witte Matthias
Department of Psychology, University of GrazGraz, Austria.
BioTechMed-GrazGraz, Austria.
Front Neurosci. 2017 Apr 12;11:208. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2017.00208. eCollection 2017.
Music can be thought of as a dynamic path over time. In most cases, the rhythmic structure of this path, such as specific sequences of strong and weak beats or recurring patterns, allows us to predict and particularly sounds are going to happen. Without this ability we would not be able to entrain body movements to music, like we do when we dance. By combining EEG and behavioral measures, the current study provides evidence illustrating the importance of ongoing neural oscillations at beat-related frequencies-i.e., neural entrainment-for tracking and predicting musical rhythms. Participants (13 musicians and 13 non-musicians) listened to drum rhythms that switched from a quadruple rhythm to a 3-over-4 polyrhythm. After a silent period of ~2-3 s, participants had to decide whether a target stimulus was presented on time with the triple beat of the polyrhythm, too early, or too late. Results showed that neural oscillations reflected the rhythmic structure of both the simple quadruple rhythm and the more complex polyrhythm with no differences between musicians and non-musicians. During silent periods, the observation of time-frequency plots and more commonly used frequency spectra analyses suggest that beat-related neural oscillations were more pronounced in musicians compared to non-musicians. Neural oscillations during silent periods are not driven by an external input and therefore are thought to reflect top-down controlled neural entrainment. The functional relevance of neural entrainment was demonstrated by a positive correlation between the amplitude of task-relevant neural oscillations during silent periods and the number of correctly identified target stimuli. In sum, our findings add to the evidence supporting the neural resonance theory of pulse and meter. Furthermore, they indicate that beat-related top-down controlled neural oscillations can exist without external stimulation and suggest that those endogenous oscillations are strengthened by musical expertise. Finally, this study shows that the analysis of neural oscillations can be a useful tool to assess how we perceive and process complex auditory stimuli such as polyrhythms.
音乐可以被视为一条随时间变化的动态路径。在大多数情况下,这条路径的节奏结构,比如强弱节拍的特定序列或重复模式,使我们能够预测接下来会出现什么样的声音。没有这种能力,我们就无法像跳舞时那样让身体动作与音乐同步。通过结合脑电图(EEG)和行为测量方法,当前的研究提供了证据,说明了与节拍相关频率的持续神经振荡——即神经同步——对于追踪和预测音乐节奏的重要性。参与者(13名音乐家和13名非音乐家)聆听了从四拍节奏切换到3/4复节奏的鼓点节奏。在大约2 - 3秒的静默期后,参与者必须判断目标刺激是与复节奏的三拍准时出现、过早出现还是过晚出现。结果显示,神经振荡反映了简单四拍节奏和更复杂复节奏的节奏结构,音乐家和非音乐家之间没有差异。在静默期,对时频图和更常用的频谱分析表明,与非音乐家相比,音乐家与节拍相关的神经振荡更明显。静默期的神经振荡不是由外部输入驱动的,因此被认为反映了自上而下控制的神经同步。静默期与任务相关的神经振荡幅度与正确识别的目标刺激数量之间的正相关证明了神经同步的功能相关性。总之,我们的研究结果进一步支持了脉搏和节拍的神经共振理论。此外,它们表明与节拍相关的自上而下控制的神经振荡可以在没有外部刺激的情况下存在,并表明这些内源性振荡会因音乐专业知识而增强。最后,这项研究表明,神经振荡分析可以成为评估我们如何感知和处理诸如复节奏等复杂听觉刺激的有用工具。