Abstract

Objective: The aim of the present study was to examine patterns of neural activity in response to variations in scale notes and alterations from a scale note to a non-scale note.Methods: Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded in response to scale and non-scale violin notes using an odd-ball mismatch negativity (MMN) paradigm. Standard stimuli were set to the scale note A4 (440Hz). Deviant stimuli included two scale notes (scale-B, B4=494Hz; scale-C, C5=523Hz) and a non-scale note halfway between them (non-scale, B4+42¢=506Hz).Results: MMN amplitude elicited by the non-scale was significantly larger than that elicited by the scale-B and scale-C, which did not differ significantly from one another.Conclusion: The current results suggest that the human brain may possess pre-attentive mechanisms for extracting relational aspects among sounds of the musical scale.Significance: The results indicate that non-scale notes may be processed in a different way even in the pre-attentive stage than scale notes.

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