Abstract

Music is emotionally arousing and activates different brain areas. Musicians with encephalitis spare musical memory. However, no prior studies have used delayed verbal and musical memory tasks in a patient with thalamic damage. The aim of the present study is to analyse a possible dissociation between verbal and musical memory in a patient with autoimmune encephalitis, who was an amateur musician. JC is a 67- years-old amateur musician with autoimmune encephalitis. He and 8 participants (musicians and non-musicians) were assessed through musical (novel excerpt recognition) and verbal memory tasks (word learning, recall and recognition), including a delayed memory task, a week later. The results showed JC had spared musical memory and impaired verbal memory, and a significant dissociation between them. The dissociation found could be due to the musical training brain plasticity. These findings support the idea of music stimuli as therapeutic tools for these patients.

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