PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Neural substrates of interactive musical improvisation: an FMRI study of 'trading fours' in jazz.

  • Gabriel F Donnay,
  • Summer K Rankin,
  • Monica Lopez-Gonzalez,
  • Patpong Jiradejvong,
  • Charles J Limb

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088665
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
p. e88665

Abstract

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Interactive generative musical performance provides a suitable model for communication because, like natural linguistic discourse, it involves an exchange of ideas that is unpredictable, collaborative, and emergent. Here we show that interactive improvisation between two musicians is characterized by activation of perisylvian language areas linked to processing of syntactic elements in music, including inferior frontal gyrus and posterior superior temporal gyrus, and deactivation of angular gyrus and supramarginal gyrus, brain structures directly implicated in semantic processing of language. These findings support the hypothesis that musical discourse engages language areas of the brain specialized for processing of syntax but in a manner that is not contingent upon semantic processing. Therefore, we argue that neural regions for syntactic processing are not domain-specific for language but instead may be domain-general for communication.