| Literature DB >> 20422050 |
Barbara Tillmann1, Pierre Jolicoeur, Masami Ishihara, Nathalie Gosselin, Olivier Bertrand, Yves Rossetti, Isabelle Peretz.
Abstract
Congenital amusia is a neurogenetic disorder of music processing that is currently ascribed to a deficit in pitch processing. A recent study challenges this view and claims the disorder might arise as a consequence of a general spatial-processing deficit. Here, we assessed spatial processing abilities in two independent samples of individuals with congenital amusia by using line bisection tasks (Experiment 1) and a mental rotation task (Experiment 2). Both amusics and controls showed the classical spatial effects on bisection performance and on mental rotation performance, and amusics and controls did not differ from each other. These results indicate that the neurocognitive impairment of congenital amusia does not affect the processing of space.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20422050 PMCID: PMC2858073 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0010173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Bisection tasks (Experiment 1).
Participants were instructed to mark the midpoint of a straight line as in panel A or a line made of letter strings spelling out small or larger number words (two and nine written in French) as in panel B.
Bisection tasks (Experiment 1): Bisection performance expressed in cm-deviation from the midpoint obtained in amusics and in controls.
| Group | Straight line | Number lines | |
| Small | Large | ||
| Amusics | −.23 (.07) | −.09 (.04) | −.03 (.05) |
| Controls | −.26 (.06) | −.14 (.09) | −.09 (.08) |
Standard errors are indicated in parentheses.
Within-participant variability over trials for amusics and controls for bisection tasks on straight lines and number lines (expressed in cm-deviation; Experiment 1).
| Group | Straight lines | Number lines | |
| Small | Large | ||
| Amusics | .24 (.02) | .27 (.03) | .27 (.04) |
| Controls | .25 (.02) | .27 (.04) | .26 (.02) |
Note: Standard errors are in parentheses.
Figure 2Mental rotation task (Experiment 2).
Example of a test pair with two different objects.
Figure 3Mental rotation task (Experiment 2).
Percentages of correct responses (%, top) and response times (ms, bottom) for the same trials presented as a function of degrees of rotation and groups.
For the mental rotation task (Experiment 2): Intra-participant variability over trials for response times var (ms) and accuracy var (%) presented as a function of degrees of rotation and groups.
| Degrees of rotation | |||||
| 0 | 60 | 120 | 180 | ||
| var (ms) | Amusics | 935 (378) | 1262 (334) | 1156 (316) | 1138 (363) |
| var (ms) | Controls | 751 (311) | 1170 (364) | 1111 (252) | 1604 (420) |
| var (%) | Amusics | .02 (.03) | .44 (.02) | .43 (.03) | .45 (.03) |
| var (%) | Controls | .02 (.03) | .43 (.03) | .45 (.02) | .47 (.04) |
Note: Standard errors are presented in parentheses.
Number of participants per group, mean age (years), mean education (years), mean duration of musical training (years or level*) as well as mean scores obtained on the Montreal Battery of Evaluation of Amusia (MBEA), for the entire test (global score) or the subtest focusing on the processing of musical contour (as used by Douglas and Bilkey [16]).
| n | Gender | Age | Education | Musical training | MBEA | ||||
| Full battery | Contour test | ||||||||
| Experiment 1: Bisection tasks | Amusics | 11 | 5M, 6F | 34.73 (9.65) | 15.00 (1.73) | 0.77 (1.60) | 20.68 (1.60) | 18.55 (2.16) | |
| Controls | 11 | 5M, 6F | 35.00 (10.53) | 14.18 (2.60) | 0.36 (0.92) | 27.23 (1.12) | 27.55 (1.75) | ||
| Experiment 2: Mental rotation task | Amusics | 9 | 4M, 5F | 65.22 (3.80) | 17.3 (2.78) | 1.89 | 19.43 (2.17) | 19.56 (2.83) | |
| Controls | 9 | 2M, 7F | 63.89 (4.96) | 16.22 (2.17) | 1.89 | 26.70 (1.09) | 26.22 (2.68) | ||
Note: Standard deviation is in parentheses.
*Musical training is classified into 5 levels: 1 = less than one year, 2 = 1–3 years, 3 = 4–6 years, 4 = 7–10 years, and 5 = more than 10 years.
**The maximum score is 30 and cut-off scores below which an individual is considered amusic are 23 and 22, for the full battery and the contour subtest, respectively.