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Related Concept Videos

Language and Cognition01:27

Language and Cognition

Language serves as a bridge between ideas and communication, influencing how individuals perceive and interact with the world. Psychologists have long debated whether language shapes thought or vice versa. This discussion gained grip with Edward Sapir and Benjamin Lee Whorf in the 1940s, who proposed that language determines thought, a concept known as linguistic determinism. They suggested that the vocabulary and structure of a language influence how its speakers think and perceive reality.
Perception01:28

Perception

Perception is a fundamental psychological process that enables individuals to organize, interpret, and consciously experience sensory information. This process is crucial for understanding and interacting with the world around us. It includes both bottom-up and top-down processing, each playing a distinct role in how we perceive our environment.
Bottom-up processing begins at the sensory level, where receptors detect external environmental stimuli. These could include the tactile sensation of...
Factors Affecting Perception01:25

Factors Affecting Perception

Perception is influenced by perceptual set, context, motivation, and emotion. Perceptual set, or perceptual expectancy, refers to the tendency to perceive things in a particular way, influenced by previous experiences and expectations. This phenomenon affects the interpretation of stimuli, creating a set of mental tendencies and assumptions that impact sensory perceptions of sound, taste, touch, and sight.
An illustrative example of a perceptual set is the scenario where an airline pilot told...
Encoding01:19

Encoding

Information enters the brain through encoding, which is the input of information into the memory system. Once sensory information is received from the environment, the brain labels or codes it. The information is then organized with similar information and connected to existing concepts. Encoding occurs through automatic processing and effortful processing.
Automatic processing involves the encoding of details like time, space, frequency, and the meaning of words, usually done without conscious...
Perceiving Loudness, Pitch, and Location01:21

Perceiving Loudness, Pitch, and Location

The human brain perceives pitch through two primary mechanisms reflected in place theory and frequency theory. Each mechanism describes how sound waves are interpreted as specific pitches by the brain, offering insights into the intricate processes of auditory perception.
Place theory, or place coding, suggests that different pitches are heard because various sound waves activate specific locations along the cochlea's basilar membrane. The brain determines the pitch of a sound by identifying...
Language01:16

Language

Language is a unique communication system that uses words and systematic rules to organize and transmit information. Unlike other forms of communication, which may involve postures, movements, odors, or vocalizations, language relies on symbols and grammar. This makes human communication distinct from that of other species, who also communicate but do not use language in the same way humans do.
Corballis and Suddendorf (2007) and Tomasello and Rakoczy (2003) highlight the role of language in...

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Dissociation of the Confounding Influences of Expectancy and Integrative Difficulty Residing in Anomalous Sentences in Event-related Potential Studies
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Music and language perception: expectations, structural integration, and cognitive sequencing.

Barbara Tillmann1

  • 1Lyon Neuroscience Research Center - CRNL, CNRS UMR5292, INSERM U1028, Université Lyon 1, Lyon Cedex. btillmann@olfac.univ-lyon1.fr

Topics in Cognitive Science
|July 5, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Music cognition research reveals shared brain resources with language processing. Studying music perception offers insights into how the brain learns, perceives, and represents complex sequences, potentially stimulating cognitive and motor functions.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Psychology
  • Linguistics

Background:

  • Music perception involves processing complex event sequences structured in pitch and time.
  • Temporal aspects of sound necessitate expectations, structural integration, and cognitive sequencing.
  • Understanding music processing offers insights into broader cognitive functions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the cognitive similarities between music and language processing.
  • To investigate the hypothesis of shared neural resources between music and language.
  • To examine music's potential to stimulate sensory, cognitive, and motor processes.

Main Methods:

  • Comparative analysis of music and language cognition research.
  • Review of studies on expectation, structural integration, and sequencing in auditory perception.
  • Exploration of research testing music's impact on cognitive and motor functions.

Main Results:

  • Music and language processing share significant cognitive resources.
  • Music cognition research provides a model for understanding other structured stimuli processing.
  • Evidence suggests music can modulate sensory, cognitive, and motor functions.

Conclusions:

  • Music perception is integral to understanding complex sequence processing in the brain.
  • Shared cognitive resources highlight the interconnectedness of music and language faculties.
  • Music serves as a valuable tool for cognitive and motor stimulation.