Abstract

Music is organised both spectrally and temporally, determining musical structures such as musical scale, harmony, and sequential rules in chord progressions. A number of human neuroimaging studies investigated neural processes associated with emotional responses to music investigating the influence of musical valence (pleasantness/unpleasantness) comparing the response to music and unpleasantly manipulated counterparts where harmony and sequential rules were varied. Interactions between the previously applied alterations to harmony and sequential rules of the music in terms of emotional experience and corresponding neural activities have not been systematically studied although such interactions are at the core of how music affects the listener. The current study investigates the interaction between such alterations in harmony and sequential rules by using data sets from two functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiments. While replicating the previous findings, we found a significant interaction between the spectral and temporal alterations in the fronto-limbic system, including the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), nucleus accumbens, caudate nucleus, and putamen. We further revealed that the functional connectivity between the vmPFC and the right inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) was reduced when listening to excerpts with alterations in both domains compared to the original music. As it has been suggested that the vmPFC operates as a pivotal point that mediates between the limbic system and the frontal cortex in reward-related processing, we propose that this fronto-limbic interaction might be related to the involvement of cognitive processes in the emotional appreciation of music.

Highlights

  • Music is organised both spectrally and temporally, determining musical structures such as musical scale, harmony, and sequential rules in chord progressions

  • We investigated an interaction between spectral and temporal structures in music using functional magnetic resonance imaging data from two human experiments that are different in MR sequences, mutually complementarily capturing brain activities related to music perception

  • We found a positive effect in the right superior frontal gyrus (SFG)

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Summary

Introduction

Music is organised both spectrally and temporally, determining musical structures such as musical scale, harmony, and sequential rules in chord progressions. As suggested in previous publications[3,20], it is probable that these spectral and temporal structures of music are integrated in association cortices (i.e. ventromedial prefrontal cortex [vmPFC] or IFG) corresponding to a type of “higher-order” emotional processing distinct from a more “lower-order” auditory signal processing along the auditory pathway (e.g. inferior colliculus or STG). To test this conjecture, we investigated an interaction between spectral and temporal structures in music using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data from two human experiments that are different in MR sequences, mutually complementarily capturing brain activities related to music perception. We were especially interested in areas that showed interaction effects in integrating spectral and temporal dimensions in music

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