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Song sung blue: in brain, music and language overlap.


Music may be a balm balm, name for any balsam resin and for several plants, e.g., the bee balm.
balm

Any of several fragrant herbs of the mint family, particularly Melissa officinalis (balm gentle, or lemon balm), cultivated in temperate climates for its fragrant
 for the soul and, in Shakespeare's words, the food of love. It may also convey specific meaning much as language does, a new study suggests.

Different classical-music passages facilitate thinking about specific verbal categories, says a team of neuroscientists led by Stefan Koelsch of the Max Planck Noun 1. Max Planck - German physicist whose explanation of blackbody radiation in the context of quantized energy emissions initiated quantum theory (1858-1947)
Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck, Planck
 Institute of Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig, Germany. Carefully selected musical passages yield this effect for a wide range of nouns, from needle and cellar to wideness and blue, regardless of any emotional connotations in the words.

The phenomenon is akin to a purely linguistic one that Koelsch's group and others have investigated with groups of volunteers. After hearing the sentence The boat floats on the lake, participants more quickly read and comprehended a related word, river, than an unrelated word, needle. This booster effect on the processing of words with related meanings is known as priming. Volunteers also displayed a split-second A Split-Second was a successful synth rock/new beat/EBM band from Belgium. The duo — Mark Ickx and Peter Bonne (under the artist name Chrismar Chayell) — were active from their debut in 1986 until they split up in 1991, when A Split-Second continued as a solo project.  brain wave response that is characteristic of recognizing a word that has just been primed by a sentence.

The musical analog of priming showed up when Koelsch and his coworkers studied 122 German speakers, ages 19 to 52 years, who had never taken music lessons or learned to play any instrument. An initial experiment established that the volunteers consistently associated 44 nouns with particular musical passages that lasted roughly 10 seconds. Electrodes placed on the scalp recorded the brain's electrical activity as each participant heard various musical passages or spoken sentences followed by presentation of different nouns.

"The brain handles musical and linguistic information very similarly," Koelsch says. "Musical passages primed a surprising variety of nouns."

Some music that primed concrete words mimicked relevant sounds, such as the chirpy chirp·y  
n.
1. Characterized by chirping tones: a bird with a chirpy song.

2. Tending to chirp: a chirpy parakeet.

3.
 trilling Tril·ling   , Lionel 1905-1975.

American literary critic whose works include Beyond Culture (1965) and Sincerity and Authenticity (1972).

Noun 1.
 of flutes in a melody preceding the word bird. Other priming music portrayed the defining quality of the thing the word denotes, such as a piece featuring ascending pitch steps that was associated with staircase. Some passages used cultural references, such as a church anthem that primed devotion. It's still unclear what characteristics of music primed abstract words, including illusion and reality, Koelsch says. (Musical passages used in his study can be heard online at www.stefan-koelsch.de.)

The new findings appear in the March Nature Neuroscience Nature Neuroscience is a scientific journal published by Nature Publishing Group, the publisher of Nature. Its focus is original research papers relating specifically to neuroscience. .

Koelsch regards the results of the study as consistent with the controversial theory that the comprehension of music evolved as the brain's basic means for auditory communication Noun 1. auditory communication - communication that relies on hearing
communication - something that is communicated by or to or between people or groups
 and made possible the tonal modulations crucial to many languages, such as Chinese and Thai. Many linguists argue instead that language arose independently of music.

The evolutionary relationship of music and language, if one exists, remains a mystery, remarks neuroscientist Aniruddh D. Patel of the Neurosciences Institute The Neurosciences Institute is a nonprofit research institute that is focused upon "high risk - high payoff" research designed to discover the biological basis of higher-brain function in humans and other animals.  in San Diego.

Still, Patel adds, Koelsch's investigation "launches an interesting line of research into the overlap of music with language." Patel's own preliminary data suggest that damage to a brain region known as Broca's area Broca's area
n.
A small posterior part of the inferior frontal gyrus of the left cerebral hemisphere, identified as an essential component of the motor mechanisms governing articulated speech.
 impairs not only comprehension of language but also recognition of harmonically related chords.
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Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Bower, B.
Publication:Science News
Date:Feb 28, 2004
Words:496
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