Abstract

The hippocampus has classically been associated with episodic memory, but is sometimes also recruited during semantic memory tasks, especially for the skilled exploration of familiar information. Cognitive control mechanisms guiding semantic memory search may benefit from the set of cognitive processes at stake during musical training. Here, we examined using functional magnetic resonance imaging, whether musical expertise would promote the top–down control of the left inferior frontal gyrus (LIFG) over the generation of hippocampally based goal-directed thoughts mediating the familiarity judgment of proverbs and musical items. Analyses of behavioral data confirmed that musical experts more efficiently access familiar melodies than non-musicians although such increased ability did not transfer to verbal semantic memory. At the brain level, musical expertise specifically enhanced the recruitment of the hippocampus during semantic access to melodies, but not proverbs. Additionally, hippocampal activation contributed to speed of access to familiar melodies, but only in musicians. Critically, causal modeling of neural dynamics between LIFG and the hippocampus further showed that top–down excitatory regulation over the hippocampus during familiarity decision specifically increases with musical expertise – an effect that generalized across melodies and proverbs. At the local level, our data show that musical expertise modulates the online recruitment of hippocampal response to serve semantic memory retrieval of familiar melodies. The reconfiguration of memory network dynamics following musical training could constitute a promising framework to understand its ability to preserve brain functions.

Highlights

  • Musical expertise enhances the functioning of brain networks responsible for auditory and motor processing (Fauvel et al, 2013)

  • We investigated whether the percentage of items judged to be familiar depended on the type of material, and/or on the participants’ expertise

  • Analyses of behavioral data confirmed that familiarity decision for melodies, as well as speed of access to stored representations, increase with musical expertise

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Summary

Introduction

Musical expertise enhances the functioning of brain networks responsible for auditory and motor processing (Fauvel et al, 2013). When musicians have to rate their familiarity with a melody, hippocampus, as well as cortical midline structures, are activated more strongly compared with non-musicians (Groussard et al, 2010a). These regions overlap with the default network previously associated with spontaneous and self-generated thought (Andrews-Hanna et al, 2014). It is unclear how far the hippocampus may contribute to semantic decisions. The association of a concept with contextual autobiographical details has been proposed to make important contributions to the content and organization of semantic memory (Vallée-Tourangeau et al, 1998; Westmacott and Moscovitch, 2003)

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