Seeing music: The perception of melodic 'ups and downs' modulates the spatial processing of visual stimuli.

Neuropsychologia

Fundació Sant Joan de Déu, Psychiatry and Psychology Service, Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, Esplugues de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain; Department of Cognition, Development and Educational Psychology, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. Electronic address:

Published: August 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Musical melodies have distinct "peaks" and "valleys," which are related to pitch but are not fully understood in terms of mental representation.
  • The study explored how past experiences with melodies influence crossmodal interactions, affecting perception and attention.
  • Results showed that congruent visual stimuli (aligned with melody predictions) led to quicker responses, while incongruent stimuli (which violated predictions) caused a stronger 'surprise' response, indicating that repeated exposure to melodies shapes how we interpret other sensory information.

Article Abstract

Musical melodies have "peaks" and "valleys". Although the vertical component of pitch and music is well-known, the mechanisms underlying its mental representation still remain elusive. We show evidence regarding the importance of previous experience with melodies for crossmodal interactions to emerge. The impact of these crossmodal interactions on other perceptual and attentional processes was also studied. Melodies including two tones with different frequency (e.g., E4 and D3) were repeatedly presented during the study. These melodies could either generate strong predictions (e.g., E4-D3-E4-D3-E4-[D3]) or not (e.g., E4-D3-E4-E4-D3-[?]). After the presentation of each melody, the participants had to judge the colour of a visual stimulus that appeared in a position that was, according to the traditional vertical connotations of pitch, either congruent (e.g., high-low-high-low-[up]), incongruent (high-low-high-low-[down]) or unpredicted with respect to the melody. Behavioural and electroencephalographic responses to the visual stimuli were obtained. Congruent visual stimuli elicited faster responses at the end of the experiment than at the beginning. Additionally, incongruent visual stimuli that broke the spatial prediction generated by the melody elicited larger P3b amplitudes (reflecting 'surprise' responses). Our results suggest that the passive (but repeated) exposure to melodies elicits spatial predictions that modulate the processing of other sensory events.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2018.05.009DOI Listing

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