Abstract

Findings on song perception and song production have increasingly suggested that common but partially distinct neural networks exist for processing lyrics and melody. However, the neural substrates of song recognition remain to be investigated. The purpose of this study was to examine the neural substrates involved in the accessing “song lexicon” as corresponding to a representational system that might provide links between the musical and phonological lexicons using positron emission tomography (PET). We exposed participants to auditory stimuli consisting of familiar and unfamiliar songs presented in three ways: sung lyrics (song), sung lyrics on a single pitch (lyrics), and the sung syllable ‘la’ on original pitches (melody). The auditory stimuli were designed to have equivalent familiarity to participants, and they were recorded at exactly the same tempo. Eleven right-handed nonmusicians participated in four conditions: three familiarity decision tasks using song, lyrics, and melody and a sound type decision task (control) that was designed to engage perceptual and prelexical processing but not lexical processing. The contrasts (familiarity decision tasks versus control) showed no common areas of activation between lyrics and melody. This result indicates that essentially separate neural networks exist in semantic memory for the verbal and melodic processing of familiar songs. Verbal lexical processing recruited the left fusiform gyrus and the left inferior occipital gyrus, whereas melodic lexical processing engaged the right middle temporal sulcus and the bilateral temporo-occipital cortices. Moreover, we found that song specifically activated the left posterior inferior temporal cortex, which may serve as an interface between verbal and musical representations in order to facilitate song recognition.

Highlights

  • IntroductionSinging is one of the oldest cultural activities of human beings, one that combines a verbal component (lyrics) with a musical component (melody)

  • Singing is one of the oldest cultural activities of human beings, one that combines a verbal component with a musical component

  • The evidence supports the existence of an interactive relationship between the processing of lyrics and melody based on the common but partially distinct neural substrates of verbal and melodic processing

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Summary

Introduction

Singing is one of the oldest cultural activities of human beings, one that combines a verbal component (lyrics) with a musical component (melody). Studies on the neural basis of song have focused on how these two components are processed in our brains. The evidence supports the existence of an interactive relationship between the processing of lyrics and melody based on the common but partially distinct neural substrates of verbal and melodic processing. This interactivity has been observed in both song perception [11,12,13,14] and song production [11,15,16,17]

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