Nayak Srishti, Coleman Peyton L, Ladányi Enikő, Nitin Rachana, Gustavson Daniel E, Fisher Simon E, Magne Cyrille L, Gordon Reyna L
Department of Otolaryngology - Head & Neck Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
Department of Psychology, Middle Tennessee State University, Murfreesboro, TN, USA.
Neurobiol Lang (Camb). 2022 Dec 16;3(4):615-664. doi: 10.1162/nol_a_00079. eCollection 2022.
Using individual differences approaches, a growing body of literature finds positive associations between musicality and language-related abilities, complementing prior findings of links between musical training and language skills. Despite these associations, musicality has been often overlooked in mainstream models of individual differences in language acquisition and development. To better understand the biological basis of these individual differences, we propose the Musical Abilities, Pleiotropy, Language, and Environment (MAPLE) framework. This novel integrative framework posits that musical and language-related abilities likely share some common genetic architecture (i.e., genetic pleiotropy) in addition to some degree of overlapping neural endophenotypes, and genetic influences on musically and linguistically enriched environments. Drawing upon recent advances in genomic methodologies for unraveling pleiotropy, we outline testable predictions for future research on language development and how its underlying neurobiological substrates may be supported by genetic pleiotropy with musicality. In support of the MAPLE framework, we review and discuss findings from over seventy behavioral and neural studies, highlighting that musicality is robustly associated with individual differences in a range of speech-language skills required for communication and development. These include speech perception-in-noise, prosodic perception, morphosyntactic skills, phonological skills, reading skills, and aspects of second/foreign language learning. Overall, the current work provides a clear agenda and framework for studying musicality-language links using individual differences approaches, with an emphasis on leveraging advances in the genomics of complex musicality and language traits.
运用个体差异研究方法,越来越多的文献发现音乐能力与语言相关能力之间存在正相关,这补充了先前关于音乐训练与语言技能之间联系的研究结果。尽管存在这些关联,但在语言习得和发展的个体差异主流模型中,音乐能力常常被忽视。为了更好地理解这些个体差异的生物学基础,我们提出了音乐能力、多效性、语言和环境(MAPLE)框架。这个新颖的综合框架假定,音乐和语言相关能力除了在一定程度上具有重叠的神经内表型外,可能还共享一些共同的遗传结构(即基因多效性),以及基因对富含音乐和语言的环境的影响。借鉴基因组学方法在揭示多效性方面的最新进展,我们概述了对未来语言发展研究的可检验预测,以及其潜在的神经生物学基础如何可能由与音乐能力相关的基因多效性提供支持。为支持MAPLE框架,我们回顾并讨论了七十多项行为和神经研究的结果,强调音乐能力与沟通和发展所需的一系列言语语言技能的个体差异密切相关。这些技能包括噪声中的语音感知、韵律感知、形态句法技能、语音技能、阅读技能以及第二语言/外语学习的各个方面。总体而言,当前的工作为使用个体差异方法研究音乐能力与语言的联系提供了一个明确的议程和框架,重点是利用复杂音乐能力和语言特征基因组学的进展。