| Literature DB >> 24795605 |
Carlotta Lega1, Zaira Cattaneo2, Lotfi B Merabet3, Tomaso Vecchi4, Silvia Cucchi5.
Abstract
Consistent evidence suggests that pitch height may be represented in a spatial format, having both a vertical and a horizontal representation. The spatial representation of pitch height results into response compatibility effects for which high pitch tones are preferentially associated to up-right responses, and low pitch tones are preferentially associated to down-left responses (i.e., the Spatial-Musical Association of Response Codes (SMARC) effect), with the strength of these associations depending on individuals' musical skills. In this study we investigated whether listening to tones of different pitch affects the representation of external space, as assessed in a visual and haptic line bisection paradigm, in musicians and non musicians. Low and high pitch tones affected the bisection performance in musicians differently, both when pitch was relevant and irrelevant for the task, and in both the visual and the haptic modality. No effect of pitch height was observed on the bisection performance of non musicians. Moreover, our data also show that musicians present a (supramodal) rightward bisection bias in both the visual and the haptic modality, extending previous findings limited to the visual modality, and consistent with the idea that intense practice with musical notation and bimanual instrument training affects hemispheric lateralization.Entities:
Keywords: line bisection; musicians; pitch; pseudoneglect; space perception
Year: 2014 PMID: 24795605 PMCID: PMC4006044 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1The mean percentage bisection bias in musicians. Participants showed a significant rightward bias (minineglect) both with the left and with the right hand. The tendency to bisect to the right was stronger with the left than with the right hand, although not to a significant extent (p = 0.081). Error bars represent ±1 SEM. Asterisks indicate that the bias was significantly different from zero (i.e., true midline, absence of bias).
Figure 2Mean percentage visual bisection bias in the height (A) and in the timbre (B) judgment tasks in visually bisecting rods in the control (white noise), low tones and high tones conditions. Overall, listening to low tones shifted musicians’ bisection significantly to the left compared to listening to white noise or high tones; pitch of the tones did not affect non musicians’ performance. Error bars represent ±1 SEM. Asterisks indicate significant differences between task conditions.
Figure 3Mean percentage haptic bisection bias in the height (A) and in the timbre (B) judgment tasks in bisecting rods in the control (white noise), low tones and high tones conditions. Overall, listening to low tones shifted musicians’ bisection significantly to the left compared to listening to white noise or high tones. Pitch of the tones did not affect non musicians’ performance. Error bars represent ±1 SEM. Asterisks indicate significant differences between task conditions.