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The effects of background music on neural responses during reading comprehension

Meng Du, Jun Jiang, Zhemin Li, Dongrui Man, Cunmei Jiang

2020Scientific Reports32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The effects of background speech or noise on visually based cognitive tasks has been widely investigated; however, little is known about how the brain works during such cognitive tasks when music, having a powerful function of evoking emotions, is used as the background sound. The present study used event-related potentials to examine the effects of background music on neural responses during reading comprehension and their modulation by musical arousal. Thirty-nine postgraduates judged the correctness of sentences about world knowledge without or with background music (high-arousal music and low-arousal music). The participants' arousal levels were reported during the experiment. The results showed that the N400 effect, elicited by world knowledge violations versus correct controls, was significantly smaller for silence than those for high- and low-arousal music backgrounds, with no significant difference between the two musical backgrounds. This outcome might have occurred because the arousal levels of the participants were not affected by the high- and low-arousal music throughout the experiment. These findings suggest that background music affects neural responses during reading comprehension by increasing the difficulty of semantic integration, and thus extend the irrelevant sound effect to suggest that the neural processing of visually based cognitive tasks can also be affected by music.

Topics & Concepts

ArousalN400Cognitive psychologyPsychologyCognitionComprehensionReading (process)Music psychologyMusicalEvent-related potentialComputer scienceMusic educationNeuroscienceLinguisticsPedagogyArtVisual artsProgramming languagePhilosophyNeuroscience and Music PerceptionNeurobiology of Language and BilingualismMultisensory perception and integration
The effects of background music on neural responses during reading comprehension | Litcius