Abnormal electrical brain responses to pitch in congenital amusia.

Isabelle Peretz, Elvira Brattico, Mari Tervaniemi
Author Information
  1. Isabelle Peretz: Department of Psychology, University of Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. isabelle.peretz@umontreal.ca

Abstract

Congenital amusia is a lifelong disability that prevents afflicted individuals from enjoying music as ordinary people do. The deficit is limited to music and cannot be explained by prior brain lesion, hearing loss, or any cognitive or socio-affective disturbance. Recent behavioral results suggest that this disorder is critically dependent on fine-grained pitch discrimination. Here, we present novel electrophysiological evidence that this disorder can be traced down to a right-lateralized N2-P3 response elicited by pitch changes. This abnormal brain response begins as early as 200 milliseconds after tone onset and may serve as a marker of an anomaly in music acquisition.

MeSH Term

Acoustic Stimulation
Brain
Brain Mapping
Case-Control Studies
Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation
Evoked Potentials, Auditory
Female
Humans
Imaging, Three-Dimensional
Male
Middle Aged
Music
Perceptual Disorders
Pitch Discrimination
Pitch Perception
Reaction Time

Word Cloud

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