Abstract
Congenital amusia is a neuro-developmental disorder that primarily manifests as a difficulty in the perception and memory of pitch-based materials, including music. Recent findings have shown that the amusic brain exhibits altered functioning of a fronto-temporal network during pitch perception and short-term memory. Within this network, during the encoding of melodies, a decreased right backward frontal-to-temporal connectivity was reported in amusia, along with an abnormal connectivity within and between auditory cortices. The present study investigated whether connectivity patterns between these regions were affected during the short-term memory retrieval of melodies. Amusics and controls had to indicate whether sequences of six tones that were presented in pairs were the same or different. When melodies were different only one tone changed in the second melody. Brain responses to the changed tone in “Different” trials and to its equivalent (original) tone in “Same” trials were compared between groups using Dynamic Causal Modeling (DCM). DCM results confirmed that congenital amusia is characterized by an altered effective connectivity within and between the two auditory cortices during sound processing. Furthermore, right temporal-to-frontal message passing was altered in comparison to controls, with notably an increase in “Same” trials. An additional analysis in control participants emphasized that the detection of an unexpected event in the typically functioning brain is supported by right fronto-temporal connections. The results can be interpreted in a predictive coding framework as reflecting an abnormal prediction error sent by temporal auditory regions towards frontal areas in the amusic brain.
Highlights
The seminal studies on congenital amusia have focused on impairments of pitch discrimination and direction judgments (Ayotte et al, 2002; Peretz et al, 2002; Peretz and Hyde, 2003; Foxton et al, 2004; Hyde and Peretz, 2004; Stewart et al, 2006; Jones et al, 2009; Stewart, 2011; Jiang et al, 2013), subsequent studies have suggested that this disorder could be traced down to deficits in short-term memory for pitch (Gosselin et al, 2009; Tillmann et al, 2009, 2015; Williamson and Stewart, 2010; Williamson et al, 2010; Albouy et al, 2013a,b)
Behavioral and MEG results of the present experiment were reported in detail in Albouy et al (2013a; p. 1646–1655). This result section presents a short summary of the behavioral and MEG results to support the comprehension of the new Dynamic Causal Modeling (DCM) analyses performed on the data
ALTERED SHORT-TERM RETRIEVAL OF MELODIC INFORMATION IN CONGENITAL AMUSIA As reported in Albouy et al (2013a), source reconstruction of the Event Related Fields (ERFs) elicited by the changed tone allowed us to observe activity in bilateral auditory cortices and bilateral pars opercularis of the IFG (BA 44) in the control group
Summary
Congenital amusia refers to a neuro-developmental disorder characterized by impairments in pitch perception, production, and memory, more or less strongly accompanied by deficits along the time dimension (i.e., altered processing of rhythm or meter) (Ayotte et al, 2002; Peretz et al, 2002; Stewart, 2011; Peretz, 2013; Williamson and Stewart, 2013; Tillmann et al, 2015). Data collected with a conventional “span” memory task with numbers (Williamson and Stewart, 2010), or with a delayed comparison task with one-syllable words (Tillmann et al, 2009) showed intact performance in congenital amusics for verbal material, while confirming impaired performance for musical material. Amusic individuals exhibit increased sensitivity (i.e., leading to decreased performance) to interference caused by irrelevant tones presented during the Frontiers in Human Neuroscience www.frontiersin.org
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