| Literature DB >> 25076879 |
Henning Vollmann1, Patrick Ragert2, Virginia Conde3, Arno Villringer4, Joseph Classen5, Otto W Witte6, Christopher J Steele2.
Abstract
Long-term musical expertise has been shown to be associated with a number of functional and structural brain changes, making it an attractive model for investigating use-dependent plasticity in humans. Physiological interhemispheric inhibition (IHI) as examined by transcranial magnetic stimulation has been shown to be correlated with anatomical properties of the corpus callosum as indexed by fractional anisotropy (FA). However, whether or not IHI or the relationship between IHI and FA in the corpus callosum can be modified by different musical training regimes remains largely unknown. We investigated this question in musicians with different requirements for bimanual finger movements (piano and string players) and non-expert controls. IHI values were generally higher in musicians, but differed significantly from non-musicians only in string players. IHI was correlated with FA in the posterior midbody of the corpus callosum across all participants. Interestingly, subsequent analyses revealed that this relationship may indeed be modulated by different musical training regimes. Crucially, while string players had greater IHI than non-musicians and showed a positive structure-function relationship, the amount of IHI in pianists was comparable to that of non-musicians and there was no significant structure-function relationship. Our findings indicate instrument specific use-dependent plasticity in both functional (IHI) and structural (FA) connectivity of motor related brain regions in musicians.Entities:
Keywords: corpus callosum; diffusion imaging; fractional anisotropy; interhemispheric inhibition; musical training; pianists; string players; use-dependent plasticity
Year: 2014 PMID: 25076879 PMCID: PMC4100438 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Participant demographics.
| 16 | 15 | 7 | 8 | |
| Male/Female | 6/10 | 9/6 | 4/3 | 5/3 |
| Age (years) | 23.81 (2.14) | 24.13 (2.35) | 24.29 (3.40) | 24.00 (1.60) |
| Mean ( | – | 5.47 (1.25) | 5.57 (1.62) | 5.38 (0.92) |
| Range | – | 4–8 | 4–8 | 4–6 |
| Mean ( | – | 11.40 (3.33) | 10.00 (3.00) | 12.63 (3.29) |
| Range | – | 6–16 | 6–14 | 6–16 |
| Mean ( | – | 6.60 (7.21) | 4.00 (5.69) | 8.88 (7.97) |
| Range | – | 0–25 | 0–15 | 2–25 |
| 1mV L (%) | 45.38 (7.36) | 46.67 (6.38) | 49.00 (6.71) | 44.63 (5.71) |
| 1mV R (%) | 47.50 (7.47) | 47.07 (5.46) | 49.14 (4.14) | 45.25 (6.07) |
| IHI LR (%) | 38.34 (24.57) | 54.37 (15.49) | 48.53 (16.34) | 59.47 (13.67) |
| IHI RL (%) | 45.22 (20.66) | 43.82 (19.80) | 42.56 (18.81) | 44.93 (21.86) |
denotes the significant difference in LR IHI between musicians and non-musicians (Kruskal-Wallis test, p < 0.05). There were no significant age differences (p = 0.70) between the groups nor any differences in age of onset (p = 1), formal training (p = 0.52), or current practice (p = 0.80) between pianists and string players.
denotes the significant difference in IHI between string players and non-musicians (Bonferroni-corrected Kruskal-Wallis test, p < 0.05).
Figure 1Median boxplot of group differences in IHI from left to right M1 between musicians (gray) and non-musicians (black). On each box, the horizontal line represents the median, the upper and lower edges the 75th and 25th percentile, the whiskers show the range, and red “+”s indicate statistical outliers. Musicians were subdivided into pianists (n = 7) and string players (n = 8) and plotted separately within the gray box. Significant group differences are denoted with *(p < 0.05, corrected for multiple comparisons).
Figure 2(A) Fractional anisotropy in the posterior midbody of the corpus callosum was positively correlated with baseline IHI across all participants. (A) is overlayed with the classification scheme of Hofer and Frahm (2006). (B) Mean FA extracted from the significant region plotted against IHI. Non-musician controls are depicted in black, pianists in red, string players in blue, and group centroids are denoted with squares. The solid line depicts the linear regression through the plotted points. Group-wise correlations performed on the extracted FA values revealed that the positive correlation is also present within non-musicians (r = 0.44, p < 0.05), musicians (r = 0.51, p < 0.05), and string players (r = 0.96, p < 0.005).
Figure 3Significant correlations between FA in the corpus callosum and current practice (blue) across musicians in the splenium of the corpus callosum. This finding is in a similar region of the splenium where FA significantly correlated with retrospective hours of musical practice during adolescence in a study by Bengtsson et al. (2005).