BMC Neuroscience (Dec 2011)

It's not what you say but the way that you say it: an fMRI study of differential lexical and non-lexical prosodic pitch processing

  • Tracy Derek K,
  • Ho David K,
  • O'Daly Owen,
  • Michalopoulou Panayiota,
  • Lloyd Lisa C,
  • Dimond Eleanor,
  • Matsumoto Kazunori,
  • Shergill Sukhwinder S

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2202-12-128
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 128

Abstract

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Abstract Background This study aims to identify the neural substrate involved in prosodic pitch processing. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to test the premise that prosody pitch processing is primarily subserved by the right cortical hemisphere. Two experimental paradigms were used, firstly pairs of spoken sentences, where the only variation was a single internal phrase pitch change, and secondly, a matched condition utilizing pitch changes within analogous tone-sequence phrases. This removed the potential confounder of lexical evaluation. fMRI images were obtained using these paradigms. Results Activation was significantly greater within the right frontal and temporal cortices during the tone-sequence stimuli relative to the sentence stimuli. Conclusion This study showed that pitch changes, stripped of lexical information, are mainly processed by the right cerebral hemisphere, whilst the processing of analogous, matched, lexical pitch change is preferentially left sided. These findings, showing hemispherical differentiation of processing based on stimulus complexity, are in accord with a 'task dependent' hypothesis of pitch processing.