| Literature DB >> 18231575 |
Lauren Stewart1, Tobias Overath, Jason D Warren, Jessica M Foxton, Timothy D Griffiths.
Abstract
Pitch patterns, such as melodies, consist of two levels of structure: a global level, comprising the pattern of ups and downs, or contour; and a local level, comprising the precise intervals that make up this contour. An influential neuropsychological model suggests that these two levels of processing are hierarchically linked, with processing of the global structure occurring within the right hemisphere in advance of local processing within the left. However, the predictions of this model and its anatomical basis have not been tested in neurologically normal individuals. The present study used fMRI and required participants to listen to consecutive pitch sequences while performing a same/different one-back task. Sequences, when different, either preserved (local) or violated (global) the contour of the sequence preceding them. When the activations for the local and global conditions were contrasted directly, additional activation was seen for local processing in right planum temporale and posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS). The presence of additional activation for local over global processing supports the hierarchical view that the global structure of a pitch sequence acts as a "framework" on which the local detail is subsequently hung. However, the lateralisation of activation seen in the present study, with global processing occurring in left pSTS and local processing occurring bilaterally, differed from that predicted by the neuroanatomical model. A re-examination of the individual lesion data on which the neuroanatomical model is based revealed that the lesion data equally well support the laterality scheme suggested by our data. While the present study supports the hierarchical view of local and global processing, there is an evident need for further research, both in patients and neurologically normal individuals, before an understanding of the functional lateralisation of local and global processing can be considered established.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18231575 PMCID: PMC2198945 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0001470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Activations for the Local ([Ldiff–Same]) (red) and Global ([Gdiff–Same]) (blue) contrasts superimposed on a tilted (pitch: −0.5) normalised average structural scan covering STS.
Activations are thresholded at p<0.005 (uncorrected), for display purposes. Plots show the BOLD signal at local maxima in left and right pSTS. See also Figure S1.
Stereotactic coordinates for the three contrasts Local, Global, and Local–Global.
| Contrast | x | y | z | t-value |
|
| 62 | −52 | 4 | 4.31 |
| −68 | −36 | −8 | 4.00 | |
| −68 | −40 | −8 | 3.92 | |
| −58 | −36 | 0 | 3.65 | |
|
| −60 | −36 | −2 | 3.94 |
| −54 | −44 | 0 | 3.48 | |
|
| 68 | −46 | 4 | 5.03 |
| 60 | −30 | −2 | 4.98 | |
| 62 | −22 | 8 | 4.75 |
Figure 2Activations for the Local–Global ([Ldiff–Gdiff]) contrast superimposed on coronal sections of participants' normalised average structural scan.
Plots show the BOLD signal at local maxima in right PT (top right) and pSTS (bottom right).
Figure 3Schematic of two consecutive trials.
Light blue indicates a pitch sequence that is identical to the previous sequence, dark blue indicates a pitch sequence that is different from the previous sequence; the first pitch sequence (grey) is neither the same nor different since there is no preceding pitch sequence. The scan period at the end of the trial is depicted in dark grey. Pitch sequences were 1200 ms long and separated by 800 ms gaps. Participants performed a one-back task, indicating whether a pitch sequence was same/different from the previous pitch sequence.