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ERP evidence for cross-domain prosodic priming from music to speech.
Sun, Mingjiang; Xing, Weijing; Yu, Wenjing; Slevc, L Robert; Li, Weijun.
Affiliation
  • Sun M; Research Center of Brain and Cognitive Neuroscience, Liaoning Normal University, Huanghe Road 850, Dalian 116029, China; Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Neuroscience, Liaoning Province, Dalian 116029, China.
  • Xing W; Research Center of Brain and Cognitive Neuroscience, Liaoning Normal University, Huanghe Road 850, Dalian 116029, China; Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Neuroscience, Liaoning Province, Dalian 116029, China.
  • Yu W; Research Center of Brain and Cognitive Neuroscience, Liaoning Normal University, Huanghe Road 850, Dalian 116029, China; Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Neuroscience, Liaoning Province, Dalian 116029, China.
  • Slevc LR; Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA. Electronic address: slevc@umd.edu.
  • Li W; Research Center of Brain and Cognitive Neuroscience, Liaoning Normal University, Huanghe Road 850, Dalian 116029, China; Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Neuroscience, Liaoning Province, Dalian 116029, China. Electronic address: liwj@lnnu.edu.cn.
Brain Lang ; 254: 105439, 2024 Jul.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38945108
ABSTRACT
Considerable work has investigated similarities between the processing of music and language, but it remains unclear whether typical, genuine music can influence speech processing via cross-domain priming. To investigate this, we measured ERPs to musical phrases and to syntactically ambiguous Chinese phrases that could be disambiguated by early or late prosodic boundaries. Musical primes also had either early or late prosodic boundaries and we asked participants to judge whether the prime and target have the same structure. Within musical phrases, prosodic boundaries elicited reduced N1 and enhanced P2 components (relative to the no-boundary condition) and musical phrases with late boundaries exhibited a closure positive shift (CPS) component. More importantly, primed target phrases elicited a smaller CPS compared to non-primed phrases, regardless of the type of ambiguous phrase. These results suggest that prosodic priming can occur across domains, supporting the existence of common neural processes in music and language processing.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Speech Perception / Electroencephalography / Evoked Potentials / Music Limits: Adult / Female / Humans / Male Language: En Journal: Brain Lang / Brain and language / Brain lang Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: China Country of publication: Países Bajos

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Speech Perception / Electroencephalography / Evoked Potentials / Music Limits: Adult / Female / Humans / Male Language: En Journal: Brain Lang / Brain and language / Brain lang Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: China Country of publication: Países Bajos