Abstract

Humans naturally perceive and move to a musical beat, entraining body movements to auditory rhythms through clapping, tapping, and dancing. Yet the accuracy of this seemingly effortless behavior varies widely across individuals. Beat perception and production abilities can be improved by experience, such as music and dance training, and impaired by progressive neurological changes, such as in Parkinson's disease. In this study, we assessed the effects of music and dance experience on beat processing in young and older adults, as well as individuals with early-stage Parkinson's disease. We used the Beat Alignment Test (BAT) to assess beat perception and production in a convenience sample of 458 participants (278 healthy young adults, 139 healthy older adults, and 41 people with early-stage Parkinson's disease), with varying levels of music and dance training. In general, we found that participants with over three years of music training had more accurate beat perception than those with less training (p < .001). Interestingly, Parkinson's disease patients with music training had beat production abilities comparable to healthy adults while Parkinson's disease patients with minimal to no music training performed significantly worse. No effects were found in healthy adults for dance training, and too few Parkinson's disease patients had dance training to reliably assess its effects. The finding that musically trained Parkinson's disease patients performed similarly to healthy adults during a beat production task, while untrained patients did not, suggests music training may preserve certain rhythmic motor timing abilities in early-stage Parkinson's disease.

Highlights

  • Most humans naturally perceive the underlying temporal regularity in music termed the beat

  • Six participants who did not complete both beat perception and production tasks of the Beat Alignment Test (BAT) and eight participants who did not indicate the years of previous music and dance training experience were excluded from the analyses

  • Age differences in the range found in the older adults and Parkinson’s disease group do not appear to reliably affect beat perception or production

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Summary

Introduction

Most humans naturally perceive the underlying temporal regularity in music termed the beat. Humans often spontaneously synchronize their body movements to music through tapping or clapping. The process of synchronizing, or entraining, movement to the beat engages motor areas of the brain. The basal ganglia have been shown to play a key role in perceiving the beat [1], and Parkinson’s disease patients, who have dysfunctional inputs to the basal. Canada (JAG) (RGPIN-2016-05834) and the James S. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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