Vanden Bosch der Nederlanden Christina M, Joanisse Marc F, Grahn Jessica A, Snijders Tineke M, Schoffelen Jan-Mathijs
The Brain and Mind Institute, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada.
The Brain and Mind Institute, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada; Psychology Department, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada.
Neuroimage. 2022 May 15;252:119049. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119049. Epub 2022 Mar 4.
Music is often described in the laboratory and in the classroom as a beneficial tool for memory encoding and retention, with a particularly strong effect when words are sung to familiar compared to unfamiliar melodies. However, the neural mechanisms underlying this memory benefit, especially for benefits related to familiar music are not well understood. The current study examined whether neural tracking of the slow syllable rhythms of speech and song is modulated by melody familiarity. Participants became familiar with twelve novel melodies over four days prior to MEG testing. Neural tracking of the same utterances spoken and sung revealed greater cerebro-acoustic phase coherence for sung compared to spoken utterances, but did not show an effect of familiar melody when stimuli were grouped by their assigned (trained) familiarity. However, when participant's subjective ratings of perceived familiarity were used to group stimuli, a large effect of familiarity was observed. This effect was not specific to song, as it was observed in both sung and spoken utterances. Exploratory analyses revealed some in-session learning of unfamiliar and spoken utterances, with increased neural tracking for untrained stimuli by the end of the MEG testing session. Our results indicate that top-down factors like familiarity are strong modulators of neural tracking for music and language. Participants' neural tracking was related to their perception of familiarity, which was likely driven by a combination of effects from repeated listening, stimulus-specific melodic simplicity, and individual differences. Beyond simply the acoustic features of music, top-down factors built into the music listening experience, like repetition and familiarity, play a large role in the way we attend to and encode information presented in a musical context.
在实验室和课堂中,音乐常被描述为一种有助于记忆编码和留存的有益工具,当歌词配以熟悉旋律而非陌生旋律演唱时,这种效果尤为显著。然而,这种记忆益处背后的神经机制,尤其是与熟悉音乐相关的益处,目前尚未得到充分理解。本研究探讨了言语和歌曲中慢音节节奏的神经追踪是否会受到旋律熟悉度的调节。在进行脑磁图(MEG)测试的四天前,参与者熟悉了十二首新颖的旋律。对相同话语的言语和演唱进行神经追踪发现,与言语相比,演唱时的脑声相位相干性更强,但当根据指定(训练过的)熟悉度对刺激进行分组时,未发现熟悉旋律的影响。然而,当使用参与者对感知熟悉度的主观评分对刺激进行分组时,观察到了显著的熟悉度效应。这种效应并非歌曲所特有,在演唱和言语中均有体现。探索性分析揭示了对陌生言语的一些测试过程中的学习情况,在MEG测试结束时,对未训练刺激的神经追踪有所增加。我们的结果表明,诸如熟悉度等自上而下的因素是音乐和语言神经追踪的强大调节因素。参与者的神经追踪与他们对熟悉度的感知有关,这可能是由反复聆听、刺激特定的旋律简单性以及个体差异等多种效应共同驱动的。除了音乐的声学特征之外,音乐聆听体验中内置的自上而下的因素,如重复和熟悉度,在我们关注和编码音乐情境中呈现的信息的方式中起着很大的作用。