| Literature DB >> 25968248 |
Gregory Hickok1, Haleh Farahbod2, Kourosh Saberi2.
Abstract
Acoustic rhythms are pervasive in speech, music, and environmental sounds. Recent evidence for neural codes representing periodic information suggests that they may be a neural basis for the ability to detect rhythm. Further, rhythmic information has been found to modulate auditory-system excitability, which provides a potential mechanism for parsing the acoustic stream. Here, we explored the effects of a rhythmic stimulus on subsequent auditory perception. We found that a low-frequency (3 Hz), amplitude-modulated signal induces a subsequent oscillation of the perceptual detectability of a brief nonperiodic acoustic stimulus (1-kHz tone); the frequency but not the phase of the perceptual oscillation matches the entrained stimulus-driven rhythmic oscillation. This provides evidence that rhythmic contexts have a direct influence on subsequent auditory perception of discrete acoustic events. Rhythm coding is likely a fundamental feature of auditory-system design that predates the development of explicit human enjoyment of rhythm in music or poetry.Entities:
Keywords: auditory perception; music; neural oscillations; perception; rhythm; speech perception
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25968248 PMCID: PMC4504793 DOI: 10.1177/0956797615576533
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Sci ISSN: 0956-7976