The relationship between the neural computations for speech and music perception is context-dependent: an activation likelihood estimate study

Frontiers in Psychology
Arianna N LaCroixCorianne Rogalsky

Abstract

The relationship between the neurobiology of speech and music has been investigated for more than a century. There remains no widespread agreement regarding how (or to what extent) music perception utilizes the neural circuitry that is engaged in speech processing, particularly at the cortical level. Prominent models such as Patel's Shared Syntactic Integration Resource Hypothesis (SSIRH) and Koelsch's neurocognitive model of music perception suggest a high degree of overlap, particularly in the frontal lobe, but also perhaps more distinct representations in the temporal lobe with hemispheric asymmetries. The present meta-analysis study used activation likelihood estimate analyses to identify the brain regions consistently activated for music as compared to speech across the functional neuroimaging (fMRI and PET) literature. Eighty music and 91 speech neuroimaging studies of healthy adult control subjects were analyzed. Peak activations reported in the music and speech studies were divided into four paradigm categories: passive listening, discrimination tasks, error/anomaly detection tasks and memory-related tasks. We then compared activation likelihood estimates within each category for music vs. speech, and each music conditi...Continue Reading

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Citations

Jan 7, 2016·Frontiers in Psychology·Christopher C Heffner, L Robert Slevc
Dec 1, 2015·Frontiers in Psychology·Allison R FogelAniruddh D Patel
Apr 27, 2016·Neurocase·L Robert SlevcBrooke M Okada
Sep 27, 2016·Cognitive Science·Aniruddh D Patel, Emily Morgan
Jan 21, 2021·Brain Sciences·Laura Chaddock-HeymanArthur F Kramer
Feb 19, 2021·Journal of Neurophysiology·Dana BoebingerNancy Kanwisher
Aug 10, 2021·Frontiers in Neuroscience·Sijia GuoDezhong Yao

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