Short- and long-term memory for pitch and non-pitch contours: Insights from congenital amusia

Jackson E. Graves, Agathe Pralus, Lesly Fornoni, Andrew J. Oxenham, Anne Caclin, Barbara Tillmann

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

Congenital amusia is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by deficits in music perception, including discriminating and remembering melodies and melodic contours. As non-amusic listeners can perceive contours in dimensions other than pitch, such as loudness and brightness, our present study investigated whether amusics’ pitch contour deficits also extend to these other auditory dimensions. Amusic and control participants performed an identification task for ten familiar melodies and a short-term memory task requiring the discrimination of changes in the contour of novel four-tone melodies. For both tasks, melodic contour was defined by pitch, brightness, or loudness. Amusic participants showed some ability to extract contours in all three dimensions. For familiar melodies, amusic participants showed impairment in all conditions, perhaps reflecting the fact that the long-term memory representations of the familiar melodies were defined in pitch. In the contour discrimination task with novel melodies, amusic participants exhibited less impairment for loudness-based melodies than for pitch- or brightness-based melodies, suggesting some specificity of the deficit for spectral changes, if not for pitch alone. The results suggest pitch and brightness may not be processed by the same mechanisms as loudness, and that short-term memory for loudness contours may be spared to some degree in congenital amusia.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number103614
JournalBrain and Cognition
Volume136
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2019

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work was supported by a grant from the Erasmus Mundus Student Exchange Network in Auditory Cognitive Neuroscience . This work was supported by LabEx CeLyA (“Centre Lyonnais d'Acoustique”, ANR-10-LABX-0060 ) and LabEx Cortex (“Construction, Function and Cognitive Function and Rehabilitation of the Cortex”, ANR-11-LABX-0042 ) of Université de Lyon, within the program “Investissements d'avenir” ( ANR-16-IDEX-0005 ) operated by the French National Research Agency (ANR), and by NIH grant R01 DC005216 .

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier Inc.

Keywords

  • Amusia
  • Brightness
  • Loudness
  • Melody
  • Memory
  • Pitch

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