Abstract

Williams syndrome (WS), a genetic neurodevelopmental disorder, has been taken as evidence that music and language constitute separate modules. This research focused on the linguistic component of prosody and aimed to assess whether relationships exist between the pitch processing mechanisms for music and prosody in WS. Children with WS and typically developing individuals were presented with a musical pitch and two prosody discrimination tasks. In the musical pitch discrimination task, participants were required to distinguish whether two musical tones were the same or different. The prosody discrimination tasks evaluated participants’ skills for discriminating pairs of prosodic contours based on pitch or pitch, loudness and length, jointly. In WS, musical pitch discrimination was significantly correlated with performance on the prosody task assessing the discrimination of prosodic contours based on pitch only. Furthermore, musical pitch discrimination skills predicted performance on the prosody task based on pitch, and this relationship was not better explained by chronological age, vocabulary or auditory memory. These results suggest that children with WS process pitch in music and prosody through shared mechanisms. We discuss the implications of these results for theories of cognitive modularity. The implications of these results for intervention programs for individuals with WS are also discussed.

Highlights

  • The study of the relationships between music and language arouses substantial interest because of its potential to unravel issues regarding the modularity of the two domains [1]

  • To check whether the music and prosody skills related to the pitch processing of participants with Williams syndrome (WS) were at the level that is typically reported in the literature, a control group of 26 typically developing (TD) children matched on chronological age was included in the study

  • Regarding the relationships between the music and prosody tasks used in the study, in the WS group, a significant correlation was found between the scores obtained on the musical pitch discrimination task and the scores obtained on the short-item discrimination task

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The study of the relationships between music and language arouses substantial interest because of its potential to unravel issues regarding the modularity of the two domains [1]. The processing of pitch seems not to be specific to the domain of music, but to be shared with prosody in TD individuals, this could not occur in individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders, in whom the cognitive architecture is likely to be atypical [28] Such is the case of Williams syndrome (WS), a disorder that, despite its genetic, neurobiological and cognitive abnormalities, has been taken as evidence of the existence of separate modules for language and for music [29,30,31] and that has triggered controversy regarding the modularity of mind (e.g., [28,31,32]). Our study may contribute to the theoretical debates regarding modularity in WS and, regarding the modularity of music and the language component of prosody

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call