Cortical plasticity in 4-month-old infants: specific effects of experience with musical timbres.

Brain Topogr

Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

Published: October 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how early auditory experiences shape brain responses in 4-month-old infants by exposing them to melodies played on either guitar or marimba for about 160 minutes over a week.
  • - After exposure, EEG measurements revealed that infants responded more strongly to the instrument they were exposed to, indicating that early exposure influences how the brain processes sounds.
  • - Additionally, infants showed improved pitch processing for the timbre they heard, suggesting that even brief auditory experiences can enhance representations in the brain for those specific sounds.

Article Abstract

Animal models suggest that the brain is particularly neuroplastic early in development, but previous studies have not systematically controlled the auditory environment in human infants and observed the effects on auditory cortical representations. We exposed 4-month-old infants to melodies in either guitar or marimba timbre (infants were randomly assigned to exposure group) for a total of ~160 min over the course of a week, after which we measured electroencephalogram (EEG) responses to guitar and marimba tones at pitches not previously heard during the exposure phase. A frontally negative response with a topography consistent with generation in auditory areas, peaking around 450 ms, was significantly larger for guitar than marimba tones in the guitar-exposed group but significantly larger for marimba than guitar tones in the marimba-exposed group. This indicates that experience with tones in a particular timbre affects representations for that timbre, and that this effect generalizes to tones not previously experienced during exposure. Furthermore, mismatch responses to occasional small 3% changes in pitch were larger for tones in guitar than marimba timbre only for infants exposed to guitar tones. Together these results indicate that a relatively small amount of passive exposure to a particular timbre in infancy enhances representations of that timbre and leads to more precise pitch processing for that timbre.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10548-011-0177-yDOI Listing

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Cortical plasticity in 4-month-old infants: specific effects of experience with musical timbres.

Brain Topogr

October 2011

Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how early auditory experiences shape brain responses in 4-month-old infants by exposing them to melodies played on either guitar or marimba for about 160 minutes over a week.
  • - After exposure, EEG measurements revealed that infants responded more strongly to the instrument they were exposed to, indicating that early exposure influences how the brain processes sounds.
  • - Additionally, infants showed improved pitch processing for the timbre they heard, suggesting that even brief auditory experiences can enhance representations in the brain for those specific sounds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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