Near-infrared-spectroscopic study on processing of sounds in the brain; a comparison between native and non-native speakers of Japanese

Acta Oto-laryngologica
Koichi TsunodaKenji Itoh

Abstract

Conclusions The result suggested that mother tongue Japanese and non- mother tongue Japanese differ in their pattern of brain dominance when listening to sounds from the natural world-in particular, insect sounds. These results reveal significant support for previous findings from Tsunoda (in 1970). Objectives This study concentrates on listeners who show clear evidence of a 'speech' brain vs a 'music' brain and determines which side is most active in the processing of insect sounds, using with near-infrared spectroscopy. Methods The present study uses 2-channel Near Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) to provide a more direct measure of left- and right-brain activity while participants listen to each of three types of sounds: Japanese speech, Western violin music, or insect sounds. Data were obtained from 33 participants who showed laterality on opposite sides for Japanese speech and Western music. Results Results showed that a majority (80%) of the MJ participants exhibited dominance for insect sounds on the side that was dominant for language, while a majority (62%) of the non-MJ participants exhibited dominance for insect sounds on the side that was dominant for music.

References

Jan 1, 1979·Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics·T Tsunoda
Sep 11, 1975·Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior·W A Cooper, H O'Malley
Apr 1, 1983·Cortex; a Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior·L I BenowitzR W Sperry
Dec 26, 2007·Magnetic Resonance Imaging·Mohamed L Seghier
Apr 13, 2011·Medical Hypotheses·Koichi TsunodaThomas Baer
Jan 31, 2012·Journal of Voice : Official Journal of the Voice Foundation·Koichi TsunodaThomas Baer
Sep 18, 2013·Progress in Brain Research·Dahlia W Zaidel
Jan 17, 2014·Nature·Gregory B CoganBijan Pesaran
Oct 7, 2014·Laterality·Elena PlanteArve E Asbjørnsen

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