Brazilian Journal of Otorhinolaryngology (Feb 2015)

Cortical inhibition effect in musicians and non-musicians using P300 with and without contralateral stimulation

  • Camila Maia Rabelo,
  • Ivone Ferreira Neves-Lobo,
  • Caroline Nunes Rocha-Muniz,
  • Thalita Ubiali,
  • Eliane Schochat

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bjorl.2014.11.003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 81, no. 1
pp. 63 – 70

Abstract

Read online

Introduction: Musicians have more robust and efficient neural responses in the cortical and sub-cortical regions, demonstrating that musical experience benefits the processing of both non-linguistic and linguistic stimuli. Objective: This study aimed to verify P300's latency and amplitude behavioral using contralateral stimulation in musicians and non-musicians. Methods: This was a case-control study. Subjects were divided in two groups: musicians, comprising 30 professional musicians, and non-musicians, comprising 25 subjects without musical experience. Results: The present study showed that the musicians had lower latencies and higher amplitudes than the non-musicians in the P300 without contralateral noise. For the P300 amplitude values, the difference between groups persisted, and the musicians presented significantly higher amplitude values compared with the non-musicians; additionally, the analysis of the noise effect on the P300 response showed that the latency values were significantly increased in the musicians. Conclusion: The central auditory nervous system of musicians presents peculiar characteristics of electrophysiological responses probably due to the plasticity imposed by musical practice.

Keywords