کد مقاله کد نشریه سال انتشار مقاله انگلیسی نسخه تمام متن
924133 1473967 2016 14 صفحه PDF دانلود رایگان
عنوان انگلیسی مقاله ISI
Music-induced changes in functional cerebral asymmetries
ترجمه فارسی عنوان
تغییرات ناشی از موسیقی در عدم تقارن مغزی عملکردی
کلمات کلیدی
موضوعات مرتبط
علوم زیستی و بیوفناوری علم عصب شناسی علوم اعصاب شناختی
چکیده انگلیسی


• Listening to 10 min of happy and sad music excerpts changed emotional states.
• Listening to happy music affected functional cerebral asymmetries.
• Left hemispheric functioning was particularly sensitive to music listening.
• Music-induced changes in laterality were not mediated by changes in mood.
• Tempo manipulation of the musical excerpt did not modulate the laterality effect.

After decades of research, it remains unclear whether emotion lateralization occurs because one hemisphere is dominant for processing the emotional content of the stimuli, or whether emotional stimuli activate lateralised networks associated with the subjective emotional experience. By using emotion-induction procedures, we investigated the effect of listening to happy and sad music on three well-established lateralization tasks. In a prestudy, Mozart’s piano sonata (K. 448) and Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata were rated as the most happy and sad excerpts, respectively. Participants listened to either one emotional excerpt, or sat in silence before completing an emotional chimeric faces task (Experiment 1), visual line bisection task (Experiment 2) and a dichotic listening task (Experiment 3 and 4). Listening to happy music resulted in a reduced right hemispheric bias in facial emotion recognition (Experiment 1) and visuospatial attention (Experiment 2) and increased left hemispheric bias in language lateralization (Experiments 3 and 4). Although Experiments 1–3 revealed an increased positive emotional state after listening to happy music, mediation analyses revealed that the effect on hemispheric asymmetries was not mediated by music-induced emotional changes. The direct effect of music listening on lateralization was investigated in Experiment 4 in which tempo of the happy excerpt was manipulated by controlling for other acoustic features. However, the results of Experiment 4 made it rather unlikely that tempo is the critical cue accounting for the effects. We conclude that listening to music can affect functional cerebral asymmetries in well-established emotional and cognitive laterality tasks, independent of music-induced changes in the emotion state.

ناشر
Database: Elsevier - ScienceDirect (ساینس دایرکت)
Journal: Brain and Cognition - Volume 104, April 2016, Pages 58–71
نویسندگان
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