| Literature DB >> 20142334 |
Rohani Omar1, Julia C Hailstone, Jane E Warren, Sebastian J Crutch, Jason D Warren.
Abstract
Despite much recent interest in the clinical neuroscience of music processing, the cognitive organization of music as a domain of non-verbal knowledge has been little studied. Here we addressed this issue systematically in two expert musicians with clinical diagnoses of semantic dementia and Alzheimer's disease, in comparison with a control group of healthy expert musicians. In a series of neuropsychological experiments, we investigated associative knowledge of musical compositions (musical objects), musical emotions, musical instruments (musical sources) and music notation (musical symbols). These aspects of music knowledge were assessed in relation to musical perceptual abilities and extra-musical neuropsychological functions. The patient with semantic dementia showed relatively preserved recognition of musical compositions and musical symbols despite severely impaired recognition of musical emotions and musical instruments from sound. In contrast, the patient with Alzheimer's disease showed impaired recognition of compositions, with somewhat better recognition of composer and musical era, and impaired comprehension of musical symbols, but normal recognition of musical emotions and musical instruments from sound. The findings suggest that music knowledge is fractionated, and superordinate musical knowledge is relatively more robust than knowledge of particular music. We propose that music constitutes a distinct domain of non-verbal knowledge but shares certain cognitive organizational features with other brain knowledge systems. Within the domain of music knowledge, dissociable cognitive mechanisms process knowledge derived from physical sources and the knowledge of abstract musical entities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20142334 PMCID: PMC2850578 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awp345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501
Figure 1Representative T1-weighted coronal magnetic resonance sections showing profiles of brain atrophy in B.R. (above) and W.W. (below). More posterior sections are toward the left and more anterior sections to the right; the left hemisphere is shown on the right for each section. Sections have been selected to demonstrate the following key structures: (a) parietal lobes; (b) posterior temporal lobes; (c) hippocampi; (d) anterior temporal lobes and amygdalae; (e) frontal lobes and temporal poles. The sections for B.R. show asymmetric (predominantly left sided), selective anterior and inferior temporal lobe atrophy, typical of semantic dementia. The sections for W.W. show generalized cerebral atrophy with disproportionate symmetrical hippocampal atrophy, typical of Alzheimer’s disease.
General neuropsychological assessment of patients
| Test | B.R. | W.W. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Score | Percentile | Score | Percentile | |
| Ravens Advanced Matrices (/12) | 11 | 95th | 1 | <5th |
| Camden Pictorial Memory Test (/30) | 30 | >50th | 30 | >50th |
| Recognition Memory Test-words (/50) | – | – | 28 | <5th |
| Recognition Memory Test-faces (/50) | – | – | 33 | <5th |
| Verbal Paired Associate Learning (/16) | – | – | 0 | <5th |
| Word repetition (/30) | 30 | >5th | 30 | >5th |
| Picture naming (/20) | 1 | <5th | 15 | <5th |
| Word-picture matching (/30) | 7 | <5th | 29 | 50–75th |
| Synonyms test (concrete) (/25) | 13 | <5th | 22 | 50–75th |
| Irregular word reading (/30) | 16 | <5th | 30 | >75th |
| Trail Making Test A | 62s | <5th | 86 s | <5th |
| Trail Making Test B | 109s | 10–25th | out of time | <5th |
| Number cancellation (number in 45 seconds) | 21 | 20-40th | 13 | <5th |
| Famous faces—naming (1/2) | 1 | <5th | 0 | <5th |
| Famous faces—recognition (/12) | 3 | <5th | 5 | <5th |
| Digit span (forwards, backwards) | – | – | 7,5 | 25–50th |
| Graded Difficulty Arithmetic Test: addition items (/12) | 6 | 25–50th | 6 | 25–50th |
| VOSP object decision (/20) | 16 | 20–40th | 15 | 10-20th |
| VOSP dot counting (/10) | – | – | 10 | 10-50th |
| VOSP dot counting (mean time taken) | – | – | 2.3 s | 25-50th |
Percentiles calculated from standardized tests, except where marked; – = not attempted; VOSP = Visual Object and Space Perception Battery. Background information about the tests is provided in Supplementary Table S3.
a: Calculated from previous healthy control sample (n = 41–72).
b: Test administered with both visual and auditory presentation of words whereas the standardized percentiles are calculated for auditory presentation only.
c: Approximated from standardized scores.
d: Scored <5th percentile on a recognition test of famous buildings, 50th percentile on Benton test of face perception.
e: Calculated from previous healthy control sample (n = 100–143).
Assessment of music cognition
| Experiment | Musical domain | Test | Scores | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B.R. | W.W. | Controls | ||||
| Mean (SD) | ||||||
| Background | Music perception | MBEA Scale (/30; 15) | 28 | 28 | 28.8 (0.4) | 4 |
| MBEA Contour (/30; 15) | 26 | 29 (1.1) | 4 | |||
| MBEA Interval (/30; 15) | 27.8 (1.8) | 4 | ||||
| MBEA Rhythm (/30; 15) | 30 | 29 | 29.5 (0.5) | 4 | ||
| Timbre discrimination test (/20; 10) | 20 (0) | 4 | ||||
| Exp 1 | Knowledge of musical objects: composition-specific | Famous melody matching (/20; 10) | 19.2 (0.7) | 6 | ||
| Famous melody naming (/21) | 16.5 (2.1) | 4 | ||||
| Pieces played from memory from music cueing (/15) | 13 | NA | NA | |||
| Pieces played from memory from name only (/15) | 2 | NA | NA | |||
| Vocal–non-vocal test (/40; 20) | NA | 37 (1.9) | 4 | |||
| Exp 2a | Knowledge of musical objects: categorical knowledge of compositions | Solo test: era (/20; 7) | NA | 17 | 18.8 (1.1) | 6 |
| Solo test: composer (/20; 7) | NA | 17.2 (1.3) | 6 | |||
| Solo test: instrument (/20; 7) | NA | 18.3 (1.5) | 6 | |||
| Semantic relatedness: same composer foils (/28; 7) | NA | 25.7 (0.9) | 3 | |||
| Semantic relatedness: different composer foils (/28; 7) | 26.7 (1.3) | 3 | ||||
| Exp 2b | Knowledge of musical objects: notes (absolute pitch) | Pitch naming (/20) | 11 | NA | 1.5 (1.1) | 4 |
| Number of pitches identified within 1 semitone (/20) | 17 | 2.5 (1.7) | 4 | |||
| 50–100% | ||||||
| Exp 3 | Knowledge of musical emotions | Emotion recognition in music (/40; 10) | 34 | 33.3 (4.1) | 3 | |
| Exp 4 | Knowledge of musical sources: instruments | Instrument sound naming (/20) | 19.8 (0.4) | 5 | ||
| Instrument sound recognition (/20) | 19 | 19.8 (0.4) | 5 | |||
| Instrument picture naming (/20) | 20 (0) | 5 | ||||
| Instrument picture recognition (/20) | 20 | 20 (0) | 5 | |||
| Instrument sound-picture matching (/20; 5) | NA | 20 (0) | 5 | |||
| Exp 5 | Knowledge of musical symbols | Musical symbol naming (/10) | 10 (0) | 4 | ||
| Musical symbol identification (/10) | 10 | 10 (0) | 4 | |||
| Music theory: keys and pitches identification (/18) | NA | 15 | 17 (1.4) | 2 | ||
| Music theory: ‘musical synonyms’ (/20; 10) | 20 | 19.3 (1.3) | 4 | |||
For each test (total score; chance score) is indicated in parentheses. Scores significantly different from control mean (P < 0.05; modified t test, Crawford and Howell, 1998) in bold. See text for details of experimental tests. NA = not attempted; MBEA = Montreal Battery for Evaluation of Amusia.
a: Also abnormal in relation to published norms for healthy non-musicians.
b: Published data for absolute pitch possessors (Levitin and Rogers, 2005).
Figure 2Examples of trials from the ‘Musical Synonyms’ test. In each trial the two items in each pair were notated differently and the task was to determine whether the two notes represented were equivalent (i.e. the same if played): in the examples shown, the notations above signify the ‘same’ note (D-flat – C-sharp) when played (i.e. this pair are ‘musical synonyms’); the notations below signify ‘different’ notes (B-flat and B-sharp) when played.
Neuropsychological dissociations within the domain of music knowledge
| Musical domain | B.R. (semantic dementia) | W.W. (Alzheimer’s disease) |
|---|---|---|
| Musical objects | ||
| Musical emotions | N | |
| Musical sources | N | |
| Musical symbols | N |
N = normal performance; ↓ = impaired performance relative to controls; ↓↓ = impaired performance relative to both controls and other case.