The effect of visual cues on auditory stream segregation in musicians and non-musicians.

BACKGROUND: The ability to separate two interleaved melodies is an important factor in music appreciation. This ability is greatly reduced in people with hearing impairment, contributing to difficulties in music appreciation. The aim of this study was to assess whether visual cues, musical training...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jeremy Marozeau, Hamish Innes-Brown, David B Grayden, Anthony N Burkitt, Peter J Blamey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2010-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2890685?pdf=render
id doaj-72b4c64e1d9749c5bfa2d4f5295221e7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-72b4c64e1d9749c5bfa2d4f5295221e72020-11-25T01:57:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032010-01-0156e1129710.1371/journal.pone.0011297The effect of visual cues on auditory stream segregation in musicians and non-musicians.Jeremy MarozeauHamish Innes-BrownDavid B GraydenAnthony N BurkittPeter J BlameyBACKGROUND: The ability to separate two interleaved melodies is an important factor in music appreciation. This ability is greatly reduced in people with hearing impairment, contributing to difficulties in music appreciation. The aim of this study was to assess whether visual cues, musical training or musical context could have an effect on this ability, and potentially improve music appreciation for the hearing impaired. METHODS: Musicians (N = 18) and non-musicians (N = 19) were asked to rate the difficulty of segregating a four-note repeating melody from interleaved random distracter notes. Visual cues were provided on half the blocks, and two musical contexts were tested, with the overlap between melody and distracter notes either gradually increasing or decreasing. CONCLUSIONS: Visual cues, musical training, and musical context all affected the difficulty of extracting the melody from a background of interleaved random distracter notes. Visual cues were effective in reducing the difficulty of segregating the melody from distracter notes, even in individuals with no musical training. These results are consistent with theories that indicate an important role for central (top-down) processes in auditory streaming mechanisms, and suggest that visual cues may help the hearing-impaired enjoy music.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2890685?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeremy Marozeau
Hamish Innes-Brown
David B Grayden
Anthony N Burkitt
Peter J Blamey
spellingShingle Jeremy Marozeau
Hamish Innes-Brown
David B Grayden
Anthony N Burkitt
Peter J Blamey
The effect of visual cues on auditory stream segregation in musicians and non-musicians.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jeremy Marozeau
Hamish Innes-Brown
David B Grayden
Anthony N Burkitt
Peter J Blamey
author_sort Jeremy Marozeau
title The effect of visual cues on auditory stream segregation in musicians and non-musicians.
title_short The effect of visual cues on auditory stream segregation in musicians and non-musicians.
title_full The effect of visual cues on auditory stream segregation in musicians and non-musicians.
title_fullStr The effect of visual cues on auditory stream segregation in musicians and non-musicians.
title_full_unstemmed The effect of visual cues on auditory stream segregation in musicians and non-musicians.
title_sort effect of visual cues on auditory stream segregation in musicians and non-musicians.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2010-01-01
description BACKGROUND: The ability to separate two interleaved melodies is an important factor in music appreciation. This ability is greatly reduced in people with hearing impairment, contributing to difficulties in music appreciation. The aim of this study was to assess whether visual cues, musical training or musical context could have an effect on this ability, and potentially improve music appreciation for the hearing impaired. METHODS: Musicians (N = 18) and non-musicians (N = 19) were asked to rate the difficulty of segregating a four-note repeating melody from interleaved random distracter notes. Visual cues were provided on half the blocks, and two musical contexts were tested, with the overlap between melody and distracter notes either gradually increasing or decreasing. CONCLUSIONS: Visual cues, musical training, and musical context all affected the difficulty of extracting the melody from a background of interleaved random distracter notes. Visual cues were effective in reducing the difficulty of segregating the melody from distracter notes, even in individuals with no musical training. These results are consistent with theories that indicate an important role for central (top-down) processes in auditory streaming mechanisms, and suggest that visual cues may help the hearing-impaired enjoy music.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2890685?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT jeremymarozeau theeffectofvisualcuesonauditorystreamsegregationinmusiciansandnonmusicians
AT hamishinnesbrown theeffectofvisualcuesonauditorystreamsegregationinmusiciansandnonmusicians
AT davidbgrayden theeffectofvisualcuesonauditorystreamsegregationinmusiciansandnonmusicians
AT anthonynburkitt theeffectofvisualcuesonauditorystreamsegregationinmusiciansandnonmusicians
AT peterjblamey theeffectofvisualcuesonauditorystreamsegregationinmusiciansandnonmusicians
AT jeremymarozeau effectofvisualcuesonauditorystreamsegregationinmusiciansandnonmusicians
AT hamishinnesbrown effectofvisualcuesonauditorystreamsegregationinmusiciansandnonmusicians
AT davidbgrayden effectofvisualcuesonauditorystreamsegregationinmusiciansandnonmusicians
AT anthonynburkitt effectofvisualcuesonauditorystreamsegregationinmusiciansandnonmusicians
AT peterjblamey effectofvisualcuesonauditorystreamsegregationinmusiciansandnonmusicians
_version_ 1724971864056397824