Author: Wollman I1, Arias P2, Aucouturier JJ2, Morillon B3
Affiliation: <sup>1</sup>Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Canada.
<sup>2</sup>IRCAM-CNRS-Sorbonne Université.
<sup>3</sup>INS - Inserm U1106, Aix-Marseille University, France.
Conference/Journal: J Neurophysiol.
Date published: 2020 Feb 5
Other:
Special Notes: doi: 10.1152/jn.00758.2018. [Epub ahead of print] , Word Count: 231
During auditory perception, neural oscillations are known to entrain to acoustic dynamics but their role in the processing of auditory information remains unclear. As a complex temporal structure that can be parameterized acoustically, music is particularly suited to address this issue. In a combined behavioral and EEG experiment in human participants, we investigated the relative contribution of temporal (acoustic dynamics) and non-temporal (melodic spectral complexity) dimensions of stimulation on neural entrainment, a stimulus-brain coupling phenomenon operationally defined here as the temporal coherence between acoustical and neural dynamics. We first highlight that low-frequency neural oscillations robustly entrain to complex acoustic temporal modulations, which underscores the fine-grained nature of this coupling mechanism. We also reveal that enhancing melodic spectral complexity, in terms of pitch, harmony and pitch variation, increases neural entrainment. Importantly, this manipulation enhances activity in the theta (5 Hz) range, a frequency-selective effect independent of the note rate of the melodies, which may reflect internal temporal constraints of the neural processes involved. Moreover, while both emotional arousal ratings and neural entrainment were positively modulated by spectral complexity, no direct relationship between arousal and neural entrainment was observed. Overall, these results indicate that neural entrainment to music is sensitive to the spectral content of auditory information and indexes an auditory-level of processing that should be distinguished from higher-order emotional processing stages.
KEYWORDS: arousal; auditory perception; emotion; neural oscillations; temporal envelope
PMID: 32023136 DOI: 10.1152/jn.00758.2018