Neuropsychological Trends (Nov 2007)

Electrocortical (EEG) correlates of music and states of consciousness

  • Lazar Skaric,
  • Milorad Tomasevic,
  • Dejan Rakovic,
  • Emil Jovanov,
  • Vlada Radivojevic,
  • Predrag Sukovic,
  • Marko Car,
  • Dejan Radenovic

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2
pp. 75 – 83

Abstract

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The study of the perception of music is a paramount example of multidisciplinary research. In spite of a lot of theoretical and experimental efforts to understand musical processing, attempts to localize musical abilities in particular brain regions were largely unsuccessful, save for the difference between musicians and non musicians, especially in hemispheric specialization and in EEG correlational dimensions. Having in mind that human emotional response to music and to art in general is limbic dependent, this motivated us to address our question to a similar possible neurobiological origin of musicogenic altered states of consciousness and its possible EEG correlates, “resonantly” induced by deep spiritual music. For example, as in sound-induced altered states of consciousness cultivated in some Eastern yogic practices. The musicogenic states of consciousness are evaluated within a group of 6 adults, upon the influence of 4 types of spiritual music. The most prominent changes in theta or alpha frequency bands were induced in two subjects, upon the influence of Indian spiritual music, Bhajan.

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