PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Song Perception by Professional Singers and Actors: An MEG Study.

  • Ken Rosslau,
  • Sibylle C Herholz,
  • Arne Knief,
  • Magdalene Ortmann,
  • Dirk Deuster,
  • Claus-Michael Schmidt,
  • Antoinetteam Zehnhoff-Dinnesen,
  • Christo Pantev,
  • Christian Dobel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0147986
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. e0147986

Abstract

Read online

The cortical correlates of speech and music perception are essentially overlapping, and the specific effects of different types of training on these networks remain unknown. We compared two groups of vocally trained professionals for music and speech, singers and actors, using recited and sung rhyme sequences from German art songs with semantic and/ or prosodic/melodic violations (i.e. violations of pitch) of the last word, in order to measure the evoked activation in a magnetoencephalographic (MEG) experiment. MEG data confirmed the existence of intertwined networks for the sung and spoken modality in an early time window after word violation. In essence for this early response, higher activity was measured after melodic/prosodic than semantic violations in predominantly right temporal areas. For singers as well as for actors, modality-specific effects were evident in predominantly left-temporal lateralized activity after semantic expectancy violations in the spoken modality, and right-dominant temporal activity in response to melodic violations in the sung modality. As an indication of a special group-dependent audiation process, higher neuronal activity for singers appeared in a late time window in right temporal and left parietal areas, both after the recited and the sung sequences.