0000000000069074

AUTHOR

Barbara Tillmann

showing 35 related works from this author

Influence of expressive versus mechanical musical performance on short-term memory for musical excerpts

2012

Recognition memory for details of musical phrases (discrimination between targets and similar lures) improves for up to 15 s following the presentation of a target, during continuous listening to the ongoing piece. This is attributable to binding of stimulus features during that time interval. The ongoing-listening paradigm is an ecologically valid approach for investigating short-term memory, but previous studies made use of relatively mechanical MIDI-produced stimuli. The present study assessed whether expressive performances would modulate the previously reported finding. Given that expressive performances introduced slight differences between initially presented targets and their target…

Melodybinding[ SHS.MUSIQ ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing artsshort-term memoryFace (sociological concept)Short-term memoryContext (language use)Musicalexpressivity050105 experimental psychologyTask (project management)03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesExpressive Suppression[SPI.ACOU]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Acoustics [physics.class-ph][SHS.MUSIQ]Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing artsUltimatum game[ SPI.ACOU ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Acoustics [physics.class-ph]05 social sciencesmelodiesPsychologymemory improvementSocial psychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMusicCognitive psychology
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Discrimination of tonal and atonal music in congenital amusia: The advantage of implicit tasks

2016

International audience; Congenital amusia is a neurodevelopmental disorder of music perception and production, which has been attributed to a major deficit in pitch processing. While most studies and diagnosis tests have used explicit investigation methods, recent studies using implicit investigation approaches have revealed some unimpaired pitch structure processing in congenital amusia. The present study investigated amusic individuals' processing of tonal structures (e.g., musical structures respecting the Western tonal system) via three different questions. Amusic participants and their matched controls judged tonal versions (original musical excerpts) and atonal versions (with manipula…

MaleStatistics as TopicMusic perception deficit[ SCCO.PSYC ] Cognitive science/PsychologyMusicalperceptionBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineAuditory Perceptual DisorderDiscrimination Psychologicalgrained pitch discriminationdisordersmedia_commonfamiliarity05 social sciencesshort-term-memoryMiddle Aged[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyAuditory PerceptionFemalePsychologyCognitive psychologyAuditory perceptionAdultConsciousnessCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectbrainShort-term memoryExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyconsonanceAmusiaImplicit processingemotions050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesJudgmentYoung AdultTonal knowledgePerceptionmedicineReaction TimeHumans0501 psychology and cognitive scienceslistenersTonal systemAuditory Perceptual Disordersmedicine.diseaseAcoustic StimulationCase-Control StudiesresponsesConsciousness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMusic
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The feeling of familiarity for music in patients with a unilateral temporal lobe lesion: A gating study

2015

International audience; Previous research has indicated that the medial temporal lobe (MTL), and more specifically the perirhinal cortex, plays a role in the feeling of familiarity for non-musical stimuli. Here, we examined contribution of the MTL to the feeling of familiarity for music by testing patients with unilateral MTL lesions. We used a gating paradigm: segments of familiar and unfamiliar musical excerpts were played with increasing durations (250, 500, 1000, 2000, 4000 ms and complete excerpts), and participants provided familiarity judgments for each segment. Based on the hypothesis that patients might need longer segments than healthy controls (HC) to identify excerpts as familia…

AdultMaleAuditory perceptionmedicine.medical_specialtyCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectEmotionsExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyGatingNeuropsychological TestsAudiologyTemporal lobeDevelopmental psychologyLesionJudgmentBehavioral Neuroscience[SCCO]Cognitive scienceMemoryPerirhinal cortexmedicineHumansSemantic memorymedia_commonRecognition PsychologyContrast (music)FamiliarityTemporal Lobemedicine.anatomical_structureAcoustic StimulationFeelingPattern Recognition PhysiologicalAuditory PerceptionTemporal lobe lesionFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologypsychological phenomena and processesMusic
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A module for syntactic processing in music?

2006

Music and language have rules governing the structural organization of events. By analogy to language, these rules are referred to as the ‘syntactic rules’ of music. Does this analogy imply that the brain actually performs syntactic computations on musical structures, similar to those for language and based on a specialized module [1–3]? In contrast to linguistic syntax, which involves abstract computation between words, rules governing musical syntax are rooted in psychoacoustic properties of sound: syntactically related events are related on a sensory level and involve only weak acoustical deviance.

Neuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyCognitive NeuroscienceComputationMusical syntaxAnalogyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContrast (music)PsychoacousticsMusicalPsychologySensory levelSyntaxLinguisticsTrends in Cognitive Sciences
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Local versus global processing of harmonic cadences in the solution of musical puzzles

1998

The structure of Western musical pieces is delineated by several kinds of cadence. Half cadences in the main key indicate temporary endings; authentic cadences in the main key indicate definitive endings. Authentic cadences in the dominant key are of cognitive interest, since they mark a definitive ending at a local level but a temporary ending at a global level. This study investigated the local versus global processing of these cadences. Participants were presented with sections of 16-bar minuets displayed on a computer screen in the form of a musical jigsaw puzzle. The sections consisted of either the first or the second half of the minuet (8 bars each). The first section ended with eith…

Communicationbusiness.industrySection (typography)Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyHarmonic (mathematics)General MedicineMusicalInversion (music)JigsawKey (music)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Developmental and Educational PsychologyPsychologybusinessCadenceMusical formCognitive psychologyPsychological Research
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Influence of Regular Rhythmic Versus Textural Sound Sequences on Semantic and Conceptual Processing

2021

Conceptual priming studies have shown that listening to musical primes triggers semantic activation. The present study further investigated with a free semantic evocation task, 1) how rhythmic vs. textural structures affect the amount of words evoked after a musical sequence, and 2) whether both features also affect the content of the semantic activation. Rhythmic sequences were composed of various percussion sounds with a strong underlying beat and metrical structure. Textural sound sequences consisted of blended timbres and sound sources evolving over time without identifiable pulse. Participants were asked to verbalize the concepts evoked by the musical sequences. We measured the number …

RhythmEvocationActive listeningConceptual processingPsychologyAffect (psychology)MusicCognitive psychologyMusic Perception
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Music and the Aging Brain

2018

In a society that is getting considerably older, it becomes important to identify potential mechanisms promoting successful aging to prevent, limit, and rehabilitate cognitive and emotional impairments typical of normal or pathological aging. Music is a powerful stimulus able to modulate widespread brain activations. Recent research has increasingly considered music as a promising, stimulating training and rehabilitation tool for improving cognition and promoting well-being and social connection. This chapter provides an overview of recent research investigating music and aging. It first focuses on the effects of music in normal aging, both in terms of musical expertise and simple musical e…

GerontologyRehabilitationmedicine.medical_treatment05 social sciencesCognitionmedicine.diseasebehavioral disciplines and activitieshumanities050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineAging brainDementia[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologyhuman activitiesComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Rhythmic priming of grammaticality judgments in children: Duration matters

2020

Abstract Research has shown that regular rhythmic primes improve grammaticality judgments of subsequently presented sentences compared with irregular rhythmic primes. In the theoretical framework of dynamic attending, regular rhythmic primes are suggested to act as driving rhythms to entrain neural oscillations. These entrained oscillations then sustain once the prime has finished, engendering a state of global enhanced activation that facilitates the processing of subsequent sentences. Up to now, this global rhythmic priming effect has largely been shown with primes that are approximately 30 s or more. To investigate whether shorter primes also facilitate grammaticality judgments, two expe…

MaleTime FactorsCurrent age05 social sciences[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/PsychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyChronological age050105 experimental psychologyJudgmentRhythmReadingNeural oscillationDuration (music)Developmental and Educational PsychologyHumansFemale0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGrammaticalityChildPsychologyPriming (psychology)MusicLanguage050104 developmental & child psychologyCognitive psychology
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Boosting syntax training with temporally regular musical primes in children with cochlear implants

2018

International audience; Objectives : Previous research has suggested the use of rhythmic structures (implemented in musical material) to improve linguistic structure processing (i.e., syntax processing), in particular for populations showing deficits in syntax and temporal processing (e.g., children with developmental language disorders). The present study proposes a long-term training program to improve syntax processing in children with cochlear implants, a population showing syntax processing deficits in perception and production.Methods : The training program consisted of morphosyntactic training exercises (based on speech processing) that were primed by musical regular primes (8 sessio…

Malemedicine.medical_treatmentRhythmDeafness0302 clinical medicineCochlear implantRepetition PrimingTask Performance and AnalysisOrthopedics and Sports MedicineAttentionCochlear implantChildeducation.field_of_studyCross-Over Studies4. Education05 social sciencesRehabilitationhumanitiesChild Preschool[ SCCO.NEUR ] Cognitive science/NeuroscienceGrammaticalityFemalePsychologyCognitive psychologyPopulationRepetition priming050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesTemporal attentionMemory[ SDV.MHEP ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathologymedicineHumansSpeech0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSyntaxeducationMusic TherapyCommunicationbusiness.industryMusical syntax[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/NeuroscienceLinguisticsSpeech processingSyntaxComprehensionCochlear ImplantsAcoustic Stimulationbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgery[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathologyMusic
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The effect of harmonic context on phoneme monitoring in vocal music

2001

The processing of a target chord depends on the previous musical context in which it has appeared. This harmonic priming effect occurs for fine syntactic-like changes in context and is observed irrespective of the extent of participants' musical expertise (Bigand & Pineau, Perception and Psychophysics, 59 (1997) 1098). The present study investigates how the harmonic context influences the processing of phonemes in vocal music. Eight-chord sequences were presented to participants. The four notes of each chord were played with synthetic phonemes and participants were required to quickly decide whether the last chord (the target) was sung on a syllable containing the phoneme /i/ or /u/. The mu…

Vocal musicLinguistics and LanguageSubdominantSpeech perceptionMusic psychologyCognitive NeuroscienceSpeech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectMusical syntaxExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsCognitionPerceptionAuditory PerceptionSpeech PerceptionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansChord (music)PsychologyPriming (psychology)Musicmedia_commonCognition
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Categorization of Extremely Brief Auditory Stimuli: Domain-Specific or Domain-General Processes?

2011

The present study investigated the minimum amount of auditory stimulation that allows differentiation of spoken voices, instrumental music, and environmental sounds. Three new findings were reported. 1) All stimuli were categorized above chance level with 50 ms-segments. 2) When a peak-level normalization was applied, music and voices started to be accurately categorized with 20 ms-segments. When the root-mean-square (RMS) energy of the stimuli was equalized, voice stimuli were better recognized than music and environmental sounds. 3) Further psychoacoustical analyses suggest that the categorization of extremely brief auditory stimuli depends on the variability of their spectral envelope in…

Auditory perceptionNormalization (statistics)Property (programming)Experimental psychologySpeech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:MedicineBiologySocial and Behavioral SciencesPerceptionPsychophysicsPsychologyHumanslcsh:ScienceSet (psychology)Biologymedia_commonMultidisciplinarylcsh:RExperimental PsychologyRecognition PsychologySensory SystemsSoundAuditory SystemAcoustic StimulationCategorizationSpectral envelopeAuditory PerceptionVoiceSensory Perceptionlcsh:QMusicResearch ArticleNeurosciencePsychoacousticsPLoS ONE
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The Relative Importance of Local and Global Structures in Music Perception

2004

Research in experimental psychology has emotion in music is developed by L. B. Meyer.2 shown two paradoxes in music perception. By According to Meyer, listeners are not passive, mere exposure to musical pieces, Western lis- but rather constantly develop perceptual expectteners acquire sensitivity to the regularities ancies about the possible evolution of the underlying tonal music. This implicitly acquired music. Emotions arise from the way the comknowledge allows listeners to perceive subtle poser (or the improvising performer) fulfills relations between musical events and permits or frustrates these expectancies. To some musically untrained listeners to behave as music- extent, music perc…

CommunicationVisual Arts and Performing Artsbusiness.industryMusic psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectMusical syntaxCognitive musicologyPop music automationMusicalMusicalityPhilosophyMusic and emotionPerceptionbusinessPsychologyMusicmedia_commonCognitive psychologyThe Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism
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Further Investigation of Harmonic Priming in Long Contexts Using Musical Timbre as Surface Marker to Control for Temporal Effects

2004

Harmonic priming studies have reported facilitated processing for chords that are harmonically related to the prime context. Responses to the target (the last chord of an 8-chord sequence) were faster and more accurate when the target was strongly related, i.e., a tonic chord, to the preceding prime context than when it was less related, i.e., a subdominant chord. Results have been interpreted in terms of musical expectations and processing speed: the prime allows listeners to develop expectations for future events which lead to facilitated processing of the most strongly expected event. The present experiment investigated an alternative hypothesis suggesting that the harmonic structure of…

ConsonantSubdominantTime Factorsmedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyMusical050105 experimental psychologyJudgmentRandom Allocation03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSurveys and QuestionnairesReaction TimeHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPitch Perceptionmedia_commonCommunicationbusiness.industry05 social sciences030229 sport sciencesConsonance and dissonanceAmbiguitySensory SystemsChord (music)PsychologybusinessTimbrePriming (psychology)MusicCognitive psychologyPerceptual and Motor Skills
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Cerebellar patients demonstrate preserved implicit knowledge of association strengths in musical sequences

2006

Recent findings suggest the involvement of the cerebellum in perceptual and cognitive tasks. Our study investigated whether cerebellar patients show musical priming based on implicit knowledge of tonal-harmonic music. Participants performed speeded phoneme identification on sung target chords, which were either related or less-related to prime contexts in terms of the tonal-harmonic system. As groups, both cerebellar patients and age-matched controls showed facilitated processing for related targets, as previously observed for healthy young adults. The outcome suggests that an intact cerebellum is not mandatory for accessing implicit knowledge stored in long-term memory and for its influenc…

AdultAuditory perceptionElementary cognitive taskCerebellumMatched-Pair AnalysisCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySerial Learningbehavioral disciplines and activitiesArticleArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Reference ValuesCerebellumPerceptionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumansAgedmedia_commonLong-term memoryMusic psychologyAssociation LearningRecognition PsychologyCognitionMiddle AgedNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologymedicine.anatomical_structureCase-Control StudiesPattern Recognition PhysiologicalAuditory PerceptionBrain Damage ChronicPsychologyPriming (psychology)NeuroscienceMusicpsychological phenomena and processesBrain and Cognition
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The role of expectation in music: from the score to emotions and the brain

2013

Like discourse, music is a dynamic process that occurs over time. Listeners usually expect some events or structures of events to occur in the prolongation of a given context. Part of the musical emotional experience would depend upon how composers (improvisers) fulfill these expectancies. Musical expectations are a core phenomenon of music cognition, and the present article provides an overview of its foundation in the score as well as in listeners' behavior and brain, and how it can be simulated by artificial neural networks. We highlight parallels to language processing and include the attentional and emotional dimensions of musical expectations. Studying musical expectations is thus val…

Music psychologyProcess (engineering)General NeuroscienceConflict of interestContext (language use)General MedicineMusicalData scienceMusic and emotionPhenomenonPsychologyParallelsGeneral PsychologyCognitive psychologyWiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science
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Does Formal Musical Structure Affect Perception of Musical Expressiveness?

1996

The aim of the study was to assess the effect of systematic modifications in global musical structures on perceived expressiveness. Recorded performances of piano pieces of Bach, Mozart and Schonberg were segmented into short chunks of six seconds in average. These chunks were linked either in a forward order (Original version) or in a backward order (Inverted version). In the inverted version, the formal global structure of the pieces was destroyed, but the superficial features and the local structures inside the chunks were unaltered. Forty non-musician subjects were required to rate the musical expressiveness of these pieces on 29 semantic scales. Half listened to the three original ver…

Affect perceptionCommunicationbusiness.industry05 social sciencesPiano06 humanities and the artsMusical050105 experimental psychologyLinguistics060404 musicOrder (business)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychology (miscellaneous)MOZARTGlobal structurePsychologybusiness0604 artsMusicMusical formPsychology of Music
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Empirical evidence for musical syntax processing? Computer simulations reveal the contribution of auditory short-term memory

2014

During the last decade, it has been argued that (1) music processing involves syntactic representations similar to those observed in language, and (2) that music and language share similar syntactic-like processes and neural resources. This claim is important for understanding the origin of music and language abilities and, furthermore, it has clinical implications. The Western musical system, however, is rooted in psychoacoustic properties of sound, and this is not the case for linguistic syntax. Accordingly, musical syntax processing could be parsimoniously understood as an emergent property of auditory memory rather than a property of abstract processing similar to linguistic processing.…

Echoic memoryDeep linguistic processingComputer scienceProperty (programming)Cognitive NeuroscienceNeuroscience (miscellaneous)Short-term memoryMusicalcomputer.software_genremusical syntaxmusical brainlcsh:RC321-571Cellular and Molecular NeuroscienceDevelopmental NeurosciencePsychoacousticslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryCognitive sciencebusiness.industryMusical syntaxexpectancyBiology and Life SciencesmodelingSyntaxHypothesis and Theory Articleauditory short-term memoryArtificial intelligencebusinesscomputerNatural language processingNeuroscienceFrontiers in Systems Neuroscience
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Musical familiarity in congenital amusia: Evidence from a gating paradigm

2013

Congenital amusia has been described as a lifelong deficit of music perception and production, notably including amusic individuals' difficulties to recognize a familiar tune without the aid of lyrics. The present study aimed to evaluate whether amusic individuals might have acquired long-term knowledge of familiar music, and to test for the minimal amount of acoustic information necessary to access this knowledge (if any) in amusia. Segments of familiar and unfamiliar instrumental musical pieces were presented with increasing duration (250, 500, 1000 msec etc.), and participants provided familiarity judgments for each segment. Results showed that amusic individuals succeeded in differentia…

AdultMaleCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyMusicalAmusiaJudgmentYoung AdultReaction TimemedicineHumansTune Deafnessmedia_commonLong-term memoryAuditory Perceptual DisordersRecognition PsychologyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseLyricsNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyAcoustic StimulationMusic perceptionDuration (music)Auditory PerceptionFemaleConsciousnessPsychologyMusicCognitive psychologyCortex
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New evidence for chunk-based models in word segmentation.

2014

International audience; : There is large evidence that infants are able to exploit statistical cues to discover the words of their language. However, how they proceed to do so is the object of enduring debates. The prevalent position is that words are extracted from the prior computation of statistics, in particular the transitional probabilities between syllables. As an alternative, chunk-based models posit that the sensitivity to statistics results from other processes, whereby many potential chunks are considered as candidate words, then selected as a function of their relevance. These two classes of models have proven to be difficult to dissociate. We propose here a procedure, which lea…

ExploitComputer scienceFirst languageExperimental and Cognitive Psychologycomputer.software_genreLanguage Development050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Chunking (psychology)Developmental and Educational PsychologyHumansLearning0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSegmentationLanguageCommunicationParsingTwo-alternative forced choicebusiness.industry05 social sciencesText segmentationGeneral MedicineModels TheoreticalConstructed language[ SDV.NEU ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC][SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]Artificial intelligenceCuesbusinesscomputer030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNatural language processing
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Harmonic priming in an amusic patient: the power of implicit tasks.

2008

Our study investigated with an implicit method (i.e., priming paradigm) whether I.R. - a brain-damaged patient exhibiting severe amusia - processes implicitly musical structures. The task consisted in identifying one of two phonemes (Experiment 1) or timbres (Experiment 2) on the last chord of eight-chord sequences (i.e., target). The targets were harmonically related or less related to the prior chords. I.R. displayed harmonic priming effects: Phoneme and timbre identification was faster for related than for less related targets (Experiments 1 and 2). However, I.R.'s explicit judgements of completion for the same sequences did not differ between related and less related contexts (Experimen…

Cognitive NeuroscienceAuditory Perceptual DisordersExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyRecognition PsychologyMiddle AgedTemporal LobeDevelopmental psychologyImplicit knowledgeJudgmentNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)PhoneticsDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyChord (music)HumansFemalePsychologyTomography X-Ray ComputedTimbreMusicCognitive psychologyCognitive neuropsychology
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Effects of Global and Local Contexts on Harmonic Expectancy

1998

Several psycholinguistic studies have investigated the influence of local and global semantic contexts on word processing. The first aim of the present study was to examine local and global level contributions to harmonic priming. The second was to test a spreading-activation account of harmonic context effects (Bharucha, 1987). The expectations for the last chord (the target) of eight-chord sequences were varied by simultaneously manipulating the harmonic relationship of the target to the first six chords (global context) and to the seventh chord (local context). Human performances demonstrated that harmonic expectancies are derived from both the global and local levels of musical structur…

Expectancy theoryConnectionismContext effectComputer scienceSpeech recognitionWord processingChord (music)SchematicMusicMusical formCognitive psychologyMusic Perception
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Regular rhythmic primes boost P600 in grammatical error processing in dyslexic adults and matched controls

2020

International audience; Regular musical rhythms orient attention over time and facilitate processing. Previous research has shown that regular rhythmic stimulation benefits subsequent syntax processing in children with dyslexia and specific language impairment. The present EEG study examined the influence of a rhythmic musical prime on the P600 late evoked-potential, associated with grammatical error detection for dyslexic adults and matched controls. Participants listened to regular or irregular rhythmic prime sequences followed by grammatically correct and incorrect sentences. They were required to perform grammaticality judgments for each auditorily presented sentence while EEG was recor…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtySyntax processingCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySpecific language impairmentAudiology050105 experimental psychologyDyslexiaYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience[SCCO]Cognitive science0302 clinical medicineRhythmTemporal attentionmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEvoked PotentialsRhythmic primingCerebral CortexP600PsycholinguisticsP600 evoked potentialDyslexia P600 evoked potential Rhythmic priming Syntax processing Temporal attention05 social sciencesDyslexiaElectroencephalographymedicine.diseaseSyntax[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyAuditory PerceptionSpeech PerceptionFemaleGrammaticalityPsychologyPriming (psychology)Music030217 neurology & neurosurgerySentence
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Implicit Learning of Regularities in Western Tonal Music by Self-Organization

2001

Western tonal music is a highly structured system whose regularities are implicitly learned in everyday life. A hierarchical self-organizing network simulates learning of tonal regularities by mere exposure to musical material. The trained network provides a parsimonious account of empirical findings on perceived tone, chord and key relationships and suggests activation as a unifying mechanism underlying a range of cognitive tasks.

Self-organizationCommunicationElementary cognitive taskMusic perceptionbusiness.industryMusic psychologyChord (music)MusicalEveryday lifebusinessPsychologyImplicit learningCognitive psychology
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The influence of task-irrelevant music on language processing: syntactic and semantic structures.

2011

Recent research has suggested that music and language processing share neural resources, leading to new hypotheses about interference in the simultaneous processing of these two structures. The present study investigated the effect of a musical chord's tonal function on syntactic processing (Experiment 1) and semantic processing (Experiment 2) using a cross-modal paradigm and controlling for acoustic differences. Participants read sentences and performed a lexical decision task on the last word, which was, syntactically or semantically, expected or unexpected. The simultaneously presented (task-irrelevant) musical sequences ended on either an expected tonic or a less-expected subdominant ch…

SubdominantDeep linguistic processingComputer sciencelcsh:BF1-990structural integrationMusicalcomputer.software_genremusical expectancy050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineLexical decision taskSemantic memoryPsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGeneral PsychologyOriginal Researchbusiness.industryMusical syntax05 social sciencessemantic expectancySyntaxsyntactic expectancylcsh:PsychologyChord (music)Artificial intelligencecross-modal interactionsbusinesscomputer030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNatural language processingFrontiers in psychology
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The Regularity of Rhythmic Primes Influences Syntax Processing in Adults

2019

Recent research has shown that auditory rhythmic stimulation improves subsequent syntax processing of speech in children with and without developmental language disorders. Sensitivity to grammatica...

Syntax (programming languages)Applied Mathematics05 social scienceshumanities050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRhythm0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSensitivity (control systems)10. No inequalityPsychologyNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryAuditory Perception & Cognition
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Effect of Context on the Perception of Pitch Structures

2006

Pitch intervalComputer scienceContext effectPerceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPitch perceptionMusical noteContext (language use)Implicit learningmedia_commonCognitive psychology
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Influence of Global Structure on Musical Target Detection and Recognition

1998

The present study adapted a paradigm used in visual perception by Biederman, Glass, and Stacy (1973) and analyzed the influence of a coherent global context on the detection and recognition of musical target excerpts. Global coherence was modified by segmenting minuets into chunks of four, two, or one bar. These chunks were either reordered (Experiments 1, 3, 4, 5) or transposed to different keys (Experiment 2). The results indicate that target detection is influenced only by a reorganization on a very local level (i.e. chunks of one bar). Context incoherence did not influence the recognition of the real targets, but rendered the rejection of wrong target excerpts (foils) more difficult. Th…

CommunicationGlobal coherenceVisual perceptionBar (music)business.industrySpeech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectContext (language use)General MedicineMusicalIdentification (information)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)PerceptionGlobal structurebusinessPsychologyGeneral Psychologymedia_commonInternational Journal of Psychology
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Cognitive priming in sung and instrumental music: Activation of inferior frontal cortex

2006

Neural correlates of the processing of musical syntax-like structures have been investigated via expectancy violation due to musically unrelated (i.e., unexpected) events in musical contexts. Previous studies reported the implication of inferior frontal cortex in musical structure processing. However - due to the strong musical manipulations - activations might be explained by sensory deviance detection or repetition priming. Our present study investigated neural correlates of musical structure processing with subtle musical violations in a musical priming paradigm. Instrumental and sung sequences ended on related and less-related musical targets. The material controlled sensory priming com…

AdultCognitive NeuroscienceOrbital gyriMiddle temporal gyrusInferior frontal gyrusAuditory cortexbehavioral disciplines and activitiesSuperior temporal gyrusCognitionSupramarginal gyrusImage Processing Computer-AssistedHumansTemporal dynamics of music and languageCerebral CortexBayes TheoremMagnetic Resonance ImaginghumanitiesFrontal LobeOxygenEmotional lateralizationNeurologyData Interpretation StatisticalFemaleCuesPsychologyhuman activitiesNeuroscienceMusicPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyNeuroImage
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Rhythmic and textural musical sequences differently influence syntax and semantic processing in children.

2020

International audience; Effects of music on language processing have been reported separately for syntax and for semantics. Previous studies have shown that regular musical rhythms can facilitate syntax processing and that semantic features of musical excerpts can inZluence semantic processing of words. It remains unclear whether musical parameters, such as rhythm and sound texture, may speciZically inZluence different components of linguistic processing. In the current study, two types of musical sequences (one focusing on rhythm and the other focusing on sound texture) were presented to children who were requested to perform a syntax or a semantic task thereafter. The results revealed tha…

MaleDeep linguistic processingInformationSystems_INFORMATIONINTERFACESANDPRESENTATION(e.g.HCI)Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyTexture (music)Semanticscomputer.software_genre050105 experimental psychology[SCCO]Cognitive scienceRhythmDevelopmental and Educational PsychologySemantic memoryHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesChildLanguage TestsPsycholinguistics[SDV.NEU.PC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Psychology and behaviorSyntax (programming languages)business.industry05 social sciencesSemantics[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyAuditory PerceptionGrammaticalityFemaleArtificial intelligencePsychologybusinessPriming (psychology)computerNatural language processingMusic050104 developmental & child psychologyJournal of experimental child psychology
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Repetition priming: Is music special?

2005

Using short and long contexts, the present study investigated musical priming effects that are based on chord repetition and harmonic relatedness. A musical target (a chord) was preceded by either an identical prime or a different but harmonically related prime. In contrast to words, pictures, and environmental sounds, chord processing was not facilitated by repetition. Experiments 1 and 2 using single-chord primes showed either no significant difference between chord repetition and harmonic relatedness or facilitated processing for harmonically related targets. Experiment 3 using longer prime contexts showed that musical priming depended more on the musical function of the target in the p…

Sound Spectrographymedia_common.quotation_subjectRepetition primingPilot Projects050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyMusical050105 experimental psychologyPitch DiscriminationPerceptionReaction TimeHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGeneral Psychologymedia_commonCommunicationbusiness.industry05 social sciencesSignificant differenceEnvironmental soundsAssociation LearningCognitionMemory Short-TermAuditory PerceptionChord (music)CuesPsychologybusinessPriming (psychology)MusicPsychoacousticsCognitive psychologyThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A
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Priming paradigm reveals harmonic structure processing in congenital amusia.

2012

Abstract Deficits for pitch structure processing in congenital amusia has been mostly reported for melodic stimuli and explicit judgments. The present study investigated congenital amusia with harmonic stimuli and a priming task. Amusic and control participants performed a speeded phoneme discrimination task on sung chord sequences. The target phoneme was sung either on a functionally important chord (tonic chord, referred to as “related target”) or a less important one (subdominant chord, referred to as “less-related target”). Correct response times were faster when the target phoneme was sung on tonic chords rather than on subdominant chords, and this effect was less pronounced, albeit si…

MelodyMaleSubdominantCognitive NeuroscienceEmotionsExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAmusia050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineReaction TimeHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPitch PerceptionAgedHarmonic structure05 social sciencesAuditory Perceptual DisordersBrainMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseCorrect responseNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyAcoustic StimulationAuditory PerceptionChord (music)FemalePsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMusicCognitive psychologyCortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
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Learning music: prospects about implicit knowledge in music, new technologies and music education

2008

International audience; The chapter proposes an overview of musical learning by underlining the force of the cognitive system, which is able to learn and to treat complex information at an implicit level. The first part summarises recent research in cognitive sciences, that studies the processes of implicit learning in music perception. These studies show that the abilities of non-musicians in perceiving music are very often comparable to those of musicians. The second part illustrates by means of some examples the use of multimedia tools for learning tonal and atonal music; these tools take advantage of the interaction between visual and auditive modalities.

[SCCO]Cognitive scienceInformationSystems_INFORMATIONINTERFACESANDPRESENTATION(e.g.HCI)[SCCO] Cognitive science
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Connectionist simulation of tonal knowledge representation

1999

International audience

[SHS.MUSIQ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing arts[SHS.MUSIQ]Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing arts[INFO]Computer Science [cs][INFO] Computer Science [cs]ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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Apprendre la musique: Perspectives sur l’apprentissage implicite de la musique et implications pédagogiques

2005

International audience

[SHS.MUSIQ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing arts[SHS.MUSIQ]Humanities and Social Sciences/Musicology and performing arts[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/Psychology[SCCO.PSYC] Cognitive science/PsychologyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
researchProduct

The Regularity of Rhythmic Primes Influences Syntax Processing in Adults

2020

Recent research has shown that auditory rhythmic stimulation improves subsequent syntax processing of speech in children with and without developmental language disorders. Sensitivity to grammatical errors is enhanced after regular rhythmic primes in comparison to irregular ones. Our present study investigated this rhythmic priming effect in healthy adults by using subtle grammatical errors as targets, aiming to fit with the high linguistic level of the participants. We also assessed whether participants’ sensitivity to rhythmic priming on syntax processing was related to self-reported rhythmic skills and musical habits. Participants listened to rhythmic regular or irregular primes followed…

humanities
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