Department of Cognitive Science, University of California-San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093
Institute for Neural Computation and Swartz Center for Computational Neuroscience, University of California-San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093.
J Neurosci. 2022 Jan 19;42(3):500-512. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1121-21.2021. Epub 2021 Nov 30.
Predicting and organizing patterns of events is important for humans to survive in a dynamically changing world. The motor system has been proposed to be actively, and necessarily, engaged in not only the production but the perception of rhythm by organizing hierarchical timing that influences auditory responses. It is not yet well understood how the motor system interacts with the auditory system to perceive and maintain hierarchical structure in time. This study investigated the dynamic interaction between auditory and motor functional sources during the perception and imagination of musical meters. We pursued this using a novel method combining high-density EEG, EMG, and motion capture with independent component analysis to separate motor and auditory activity during meter imagery while robustly controlling against covert movement. We demonstrated that endogenous brain activity in both auditory and motor functional sources reflects the imagination of binary and ternary meters in the absence of corresponding acoustic cues or overt movement at the meter rate. We found clear evidence for hypothesized motor-to-auditory information flow at the beat rate in all conditions, suggesting a role for top-down influence of the motor system on auditory processing of beat-based rhythms, and reflecting an auditory-motor system with tight reciprocal informational coupling. These findings align with and further extend a set of motor hypotheses from beat perception to hierarchical meter imagination, adding supporting evidence to active engagement of the motor system in auditory processing, which may more broadly speak to the neural mechanisms of temporal processing in other human cognitive functions. Humans live in a world full of hierarchically structured temporal information, the accurate perception of which is essential for understanding speech and music. Music provides a window into the brain mechanisms of time perception, enabling us to examine how the brain groups musical beats into, for example a march or waltz. Using a novel paradigm combining measurement of electrical brain activity with data-driven analysis, this study directly investigates motor-auditory connectivity during meter imagination. Findings highlight the importance of the motor system in the active imagination of meter. This study sheds new light on a fundamental form of perception by demonstrating how auditory-motor interaction may support hierarchical timing processing, which may have clinical implications for speech and motor rehabilitation.
预测和组织事件模式对于人类在动态变化的世界中生存至关重要。运动系统被认为不仅在产生节奏时主动且必然地参与其中,而且在感知节奏时也主动且必然地参与其中,通过组织影响听觉反应的分层时间来实现。目前还不太清楚运动系统如何与听觉系统相互作用以感知和维持时间上的层次结构。这项研究调查了在音乐节拍感知和想象过程中听觉和运动功能源之间的动态相互作用。我们使用一种新的方法来实现这一点,该方法结合了高密度 EEG、EMG 和运动捕捉以及独立成分分析,以在进行节拍想象时分离运动和听觉活动,同时稳健地控制隐蔽运动。我们证明,在没有相应的声学提示或节拍率下的显性运动的情况下,听觉和运动功能源中的内源性大脑活动反映了二进制和三元节拍的想象。我们在所有条件下都发现了明确的证据,表明在节拍率下存在假设的运动到听觉信息流,这表明运动系统对基于节拍的节奏的听觉处理具有自上而下的影响,并反映了听觉-运动系统具有紧密的相互信息耦合。这些发现与从节拍感知到分层节拍想象的一系列运动假设一致,并进一步扩展了这些假设,为运动系统在听觉处理中主动参与提供了支持性证据,这可能更广泛地涉及到其他人类认知功能的时间处理的神经机制。人类生活在一个充满层次结构的时间信息的世界中,准确感知这些信息对于理解言语和音乐至关重要。音乐为时间感知的大脑机制提供了一个窗口,使我们能够研究大脑如何将音乐节拍组合成进行曲或华尔兹等形式。本研究使用一种新的结合脑电活动测量和数据驱动分析的范式,直接研究了节拍想象过程中的运动-听觉连接。研究结果强调了运动系统在节拍想象中的重要性。这项研究通过展示听觉-运动相互作用如何支持分层时间处理,为基本的感知形式提供了新的认识,这可能对言语和运动康复具有临床意义。