On how natural and urban soundscapes alter brain activity during cognitive performance
Emil Stobbe, Robert C. Lorenz, Simone Kühn
Abstract
Listening to natural or urban soundscapes has previously been shown to differentially modulate performance in a subsequent cognitive task. The present study inquired the effect of listening to urban (traffic and machinery noise) vs. natural (birds, water and wind) soundscapes on cognitive performance, mood, stress reactivity and the consequences for neural activity during a cognitive task assessed before and after soundscape exposure. In a randomized experiment, 30 participants were exposed to three conditions on three separate testing days: urban, natural and no soundscape. Before and after the functional MRI session participants performed a dual n-back, the backward digit span task and filled out mood, stress reactivity and aesthetic preference questionnaires. The natural soundscapes did not lead to a significant increase in cognitive performance however, the pattern of this data was pointing into that direction. Exposure to the natural soundscapes resulted in a significant decrease of negative affect and participants rated them as significantly more aesthetic. On the neural level, listening to the urban soundscape was associated with an increase in superior temporal gyrus (STG) activity during the subsequent dual n-back task. However, this result was statistically not corrected and remains exploratory in nature. Despite these circumstances this result could potentially hint at information processing becoming less efficient in early primary sensory area as a result of exposure to the urban soundscape. Correlations between affect/cognition and task related brain activity revealed clusters in the attention-network.