|
|
Click here to Join
Nikahpoint.com -100% FREE MATRIMONIAL
I N D I A N _ A C A D E M Y _ O F _ N E U R O S C I E N C E S
The Indian Academy of Neurosciences (IAN) came to existence in 1982
with the efforts of Late Prof. K.P. Bhargava, Prof. Mahdi Hasan,
Prof. S.S. Parmar, Prof. ...
|
|
|
Playing Music Alters the Processing of Multiple Sensory Stimuli
in the Brain
ScienceDaily (Nov. 24, 2011) — Piano practicing fine tunes the
brain circuitries that temporally bind signals from our senses.
See Also:
Mind & Brain
Perception
Neuroscience
Intelligence
Brain Injury
Language Acquisition
Psychology
Living Well
Reference
Functional neuroimaging
Sensory neuron
Central nervous system
Psychophysics
Over the years pianists develop a particularly acute sense of
the temporal correlation between the movements of the piano keys
and the sound of the notes played. However, they are no better
than non-musicians at assessing the synchronicity of lip
movements and speech. This was discovered by researchers from
the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics in a
comparative study on the simultaneous brain processing of
stimuli from different senses by musicians and non-musicians.
The researchers also used functional magnetic resonance imaging
in their study to map the areas of the brain active during this
process. According to their findings, in pianists, the
perception of asynchronous music and hand movements triggers
increased error signals in a circuit involving the cerebellum,
premotor and associative areas of the brain, which is refined by
piano practicing. The study shows that our sensorimotor
experience influences the way in which the brain temporally
links signals from different senses during perception.
In a world full of stimuli which affect all senses, the human
brain constantly has to link the impressions we perceive in a
way that makes sense. We learn through experience, for example,
that the synchronous events that arise in a busy bar setting,
such as the lip movements of a particular person and the sound
of a certain voice, belong together. HweeLing Lee and research
group leader Uta Noppeney from the Max Planck Institute for
Biological Cybernetics in Tübingen study how the brain
integrates stimuli from several senses and how the circuits in
the brain change as a result of learning. In their latest study,
they examined how well 18 amateur pianists were able to perceive
the temporal coincidence between finger movements on the piano
keys and a piece of piano music and between lip movements and
spoken sentences as compared with 19 non-musicians. "For this
study, we availed of the fact that the pianists specifically
train in an activity, in which several sensory stimuli, that is
visual and auditory information, movement and the striking of
the piano keys, have to be connected," explains Uta Noppeney.
During the experiment, the finger or mouth movements were
advanced or delayed in relation to the sounds heard at intervals
of up to 360 milliseconds. The study participants were requested
to specify when asked whether the events were synchronous or
asynchronous. Using the same film and sound material and the
same participants, the experiments were then repeated using
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). In this case, the
subjects remained passive and the machine recorded the areas of
the brain that became active during the automatic perception of
the synchronous and asynchronous signals.
The experiments revealed that the pianists were significantly
more accurate than the non-musicians in assessing whether the
finger movements on the piano and the sounds heard coincided
temporally or not. "The window for the temporal integration of
the stimuli in the pianists is clearly narrower than in
non-musicians," says HweeLing Lee. However, the same differences
were not observed in the experiments involving spoken sentences
and lip movements -- both groups recorded similar performances
here. In principle, asynchronicity in language and music
activates the same areas in the brain. However, the fMRI scans
showed that, in the experiment with the pianists, asynchronous
music triggered a stronger signal in a circuit involving the
left cerebellum, a premotor and associative region in the
cerebral cortex than in the non-musicians.
"The processing of stimuli in the brains of the pianists points
to a context-specific mechanism: as a result of their piano
practice, a forward model involving the cerebellum and premotor
cerebral cortex is programmed in the circuit which enables the
individual to make far more precise predictions about the
correct temporal sequence of the visual and auditory signals,"
explains Uta Noppeney. "An asynchronous stimulus triggers
prediction error signal." The researchers see this as an
important indication of how the brain can generally react in a
flexible way to sensorimotor experience. Whether pianists would
perform equally well in the assessment of violin music and
whether more intensive music playing would influence language
processing in the brain remain open questions. "For the next
stage in the study of the processing of multiple sensory stimuli
in the brain, we will have to train the participants in a
specific way so that we can investigate the effects in greater
detail," says Uta Noppeney.
Post Comment
|
|
|