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1.
Cereb Cortex ; 33(11): 7237-7249, 2023 05 24.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36897061

RÉSUMÉ

Musically trained individuals have been found to outperform untrained peers in various tasks for executive functions. Here, we present longitudinal behavioral results and cross-sectional, event-related potential (ERP), and fMRI results on the maturation of executive functions in musically trained and untrained children and adolescents. The results indicate that in school-age, the musically trained children performed faster in a test for set shifting, but by late adolescence, these group differences had virtually disappeared. However, in the fMRI experiment, the musically trained adolescents showed less activity in frontal, parietal, and occipital areas of the dorsal attention network and the cerebellum during the set-shifting task than untrained peers. Also, the P3b responses of musically trained participants to incongruent target stimuli in a task for set shifting showed a more posterior scalp distribution than control group participants' responses. Together these results suggest that the musician advantage in executive functions is more pronounced at an earlier age than in late adolescence. However, it is still reflected as more efficient recruitment of neural resources in set-shifting tasks, and distinct scalp topography of ERPs related to updating and working memory after childhood.


Sujet(s)
Fonction exécutive , Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Enfant , Humains , Adolescent , Jeune adulte , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Études transversales , Fonction exécutive/physiologie , Mémoire à court terme/physiologie , Électroencéphalographie
2.
Clin Neurophysiol ; 137: 159-176, 2022 05.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35358758

RÉSUMÉ

OBJECTIVE: We investigated early maturation of the infant mismatch response MMR, including mismatch negativity (MMN), positive MMR (P-MMR), and late discriminative negativity (LDN), indexing auditory discrimination abilities, and the influence of familial developmental dyslexia risk. METHODS: We recorded MMRs to vowel, duration, and frequency deviants in pseudo-words at 0, 6, and 28 months and compared MMRs in subgroups with vs. without dyslexia risk, in a sample over-represented by risk infants. RESULTS: Neonatal MMN to the duration deviant became larger and earlier by 28 months; MMN was elicited by more deviants only at 28 months. The P-MMR was predominant in infancy; its amplitude increased by 6 and decreased by 28 months; latency decreased with increasing age. An LDN emerged by 6 months and became larger and later by 28 months. Dyslexia risk affected MMRs and their maturation. CONCLUSIONS: MMRs demonstrate an expected maturational pattern with 2-3 peaks by 28 months. The effects of dyslexia risk are prominent but not always as expected. SIGNIFICANCE: This large-scale longitudinal study shows MMR maturation with three age groups and three deviants. Results illuminate MMR's relation to the adult responses, and hence their cognitive underpinnings, and help in identifying typical/atypical auditory development in early childhood.


Sujet(s)
Dyslexie , Perception de la parole , Stimulation acoustique , Adulte , Enfant d'âge préscolaire , Dyslexie/diagnostic , Dyslexie/génétique , Électroencéphalographie , Potentiels évoqués auditifs/physiologie , Humains , Nourrisson , Nouveau-né , Études longitudinales , Perception de la parole/physiologie
3.
Eur J Neurosci ; 37(4): 654-61, 2013 Feb.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23167769

RÉSUMÉ

The relation between informal musical activities at home and electrophysiological indices of neural auditory change detection was investigated in 2-3-year-old children. Auditory event-related potentials were recorded in a multi-feature paradigm that included frequency, duration, intensity, direction, gap deviants and attention-catching novel sounds. Correlations were calculated between these responses and the amount of musical activity at home (i.e. musical play by the child and parental singing) reported by the parents. A higher overall amount of informal musical activity was associated with larger P3as elicited by the gap and duration deviants, and smaller late discriminative negativity responses elicited by all deviant types. Furthermore, more musical activities were linked to smaller P3as elicited by the novel sounds, whereas more paternal singing was associated with smaller reorienting negativity responses to these sounds. These results imply heightened sensitivity to temporal acoustic changes, more mature auditory change detection, and less distractibility in children with more informal musical activities in their home environment. Our results highlight the significance of informal musical experiences in enhancing the development of highly important auditory abilities in early childhood.


Sujet(s)
Attention/physiologie , Encéphale/physiologie , /physiologie , Potentiels évoqués auditifs/physiologie , Musique , Stimulation acoustique , Enfant d'âge préscolaire , Électroencéphalographie , Femelle , Humains , Mâle
4.
Psychophysiology ; 49(8): 1125-32, 2012 Aug.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22681183

RÉSUMÉ

Music practice since childhood affects the development of hearing skills. An important classification in Western music is the chords' major-minor dichotomy. Its preattentive auditory discrimination was studied here using a mismatch negativity (MMN) paradigm in 13-year-olds with active hobbies, music-related (music group) or other (control group). In a context of root major chords, root minor chords and inverted major chords were presented infrequently. The interval structure of inverted majors differs more from root majors than the interval structure of root minors. However, the identity of the chords is the same in inverted and root majors (major), but different in root minors. The deviant chords introduced no new frequencies to the paradigm. Hence, an MMN caused by physical deviance was prevented. An MMN was elicited by the minor chords but not by the inverted majors. The MMN amplitude in the music group was larger than in the control group. Thus, the conceptual discrimination skills are present already in the preattentive processing level of the auditory cortex, and musical training can advance these skills.


Sujet(s)
Musique/psychologie , Discrimination de la hauteur tonale/physiologie , Adolescent , Analyse de variance , Interprétation statistique de données , Électroencéphalographie , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Performance psychomotrice/physiologie
5.
Neuroscience ; 147(4): 968-73, 2007 Jul 29.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17582686

RÉSUMÉ

Speech, for example, consists of fast-paced (>5/s) sounds in specific spectrotemporal patterns. Humans are generally held to be able to represent not only such sounds themselves (item information) but also their serial order (order-information) as a repeated melody with ease, as suggested by studies on the mismatch negativity (MMN) of event-related potentials (ERPs). The present study tested whether this ability tolerates the absence of the support of melodic repetitiveness. ERPs were recorded from adult humans presented with rare 150-ms series of three 50-ms tones ('deviants') interspersed with frequently repeated ones ('standards'). The frequency of each tone was pseudorandomly one of four alternative frequencies. The series were of type 'AAB' (two tones of one frequency followed by a tone of another frequency), 'ABB' (two tones of one frequency preceded by a tone of another frequency), or 'AAA' (three tones of one frequency). The MMN was robustly elicited by AAA deviants against AAB standards. It was, however, less distinct for ABB deviants against AAB standards and even statistically non-significant for AAB deviants against ABB standards. MMN generation in the human brain thus seems to be based on item rather than serial-order information in a rapid spectro-temporal pattern of acoustic signals that is not repeated frequently in the short term.


Sujet(s)
Perception auditive/physiologie , Variation contingente négative/physiologie , Potentiels évoqués auditifs/physiologie , Stimulation acoustique/méthodes , Adulte , Analyse de variance , Cartographie cérébrale , Relation dose-effet des rayonnements , Électroencéphalographie/méthodes , Femelle , Humains , Mâle
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