Abstract

Recent demonstrations that music is capable of conveying semantically meaningful information has raised several questions as to what the underlying mechanisms of establishing meaning in music are, and if the meaning of music is represented in comparable fashion to language meaning. This paper presents evidence showing that expressed affect is a primary pathway to music meaning and that meaning in music is represented in a very similar fashion to language meaning. In two experiments using EEG and fMRI, it was shown that single chords varying in harmonic roughness (consonance/dissonance) and thus perceived affect could prime the processing of subsequently presented affective target words, as indicated by an increased N400 and activation of the right middle temporal gyrus (MTG). Most importantly, however, when primed by affective words, single chords incongruous to the preceding affect also elicited an N400 and activated the right posterior STS, an area implicated in processing meaning of a variety of signals (e.g. prosody, voices, motion). This provides an important piece of evidence in support of music meaning being represented in a very similar but also distinct fashion to language meaning: Both elicit an N400, but activate different portions of the right temporal lobe.

Highlights

  • The notion that music can convey meaningful information in a fashion similar to language has circulated for some time [1,2,3]

  • This was investigated by means of an affective priming paradigm using both EEG (Experiment 1a) and fMRI (Experiment 1b), with the hypothesis, that if emotional expression in music is capable of influencing the processing of word meaning, it should become evident by an increased N400 to mismatching word targets as well as by the recruitment of neural structures typically dedicated to processing meaning, such as the middle temporal gyrus [1,4]

  • The main finding of this study is that the meaning of music appears to be represented in a comparable fashion to language meaning

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Summary

Introduction

The notion that music can convey meaningful information in a fashion similar to language has circulated for some time [1,2,3]. By using single chords varying in consonance to sound either pleasant or unpleasant, we assessed whether the communicated affect can influence the subsequent processing of verbal emotional meaning. This was investigated by means of an affective priming paradigm using both EEG (Experiment 1a) and fMRI (Experiment 1b), with the hypothesis, that if emotional expression in music is capable of influencing the processing of word meaning, it should become evident by an increased N400 to mismatching word targets as well as by the recruitment of neural structures typically dedicated to processing meaning, such as the middle temporal gyrus [1,4]

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