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The music of silence. Part II: Music Listening Induces Imagery Responses

Giovanni M. Di Liberto, Guilhem Marion, Shihab Shamma

2021Journal of Neuroscience23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

During music listening, humans routinely acquire the regularities of the acoustic sequences and use them to anticipate and interpret the ongoing melody. Specifically, in line with this predictive framework, it is thought that brain responses during such listening reflect a comparison between the bottom-up sensory responses and top-down prediction signals generated by an internal model that embodies the music exposure and expectations of the listener. To attain a clear view of these predictive responses, previous work has eliminated the sensory inputs by inserting artificial silences (or sound omissions) that leave behind only the corresponding predictions of the thwarted expectations. Here, we demonstrate a new alternate approach in which we decode the predictive electroencephalography (EEG) responses to the silent intervals that are naturally interspersed within the music. We did this as participants (experiment 1, 20 participants, 10 female; experiment 2, 21 participants, 6 female) listened or imagined Bach piano melodies. Prediction signals were quantified and assessed via a computational model of the melodic structure of the music and were shown to exhibit the same response characteristics when measured during listening or imagining. These include an inverted polarity for both silence and imagined responses relative to listening, as well as response magnitude modulations that precisely reflect the expectations of notes and silences in both listening and imagery conditions. These findings therefore provide a unifying view that links results from many previous paradigms, including omission reactions and the expectation modulation of sensory responses, all in the context of naturalistic music listening.

Topics & Concepts

MelodyActive listeningPsychologySilencePerceptionCognitive psychologyContext (archaeology)Auditory perceptionCommunicationAcousticsMusicalNeuroscienceArtPhysicsVisual artsPaleontologyBiologyNeuroscience and Music PerceptionNeural dynamics and brain functionHearing Loss and Rehabilitation
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