Measuring neural entrainment to beat and meter in infants: Effects of music background

Caregivers often engage in musical interactions with their infants. For example, parents across cultures sing lullabies and playsongs to their infants from birth. Behavioral studies indicate that infants not only extract beat information, but also group these beats into metrical hierarchies by as ea...

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Main Authors: Laura K Cirelli, Christina eSpinelli, Sylvie eNozaradan, Laurel J Trainor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnins.2016.00229/full
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spelling doaj-8976370f17de4e49a59b29b31564711c2020-11-24T22:53:43ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neuroscience1662-453X2016-05-011010.3389/fnins.2016.00229191178Measuring neural entrainment to beat and meter in infants: Effects of music backgroundLaura K Cirelli0Christina eSpinelli1Sylvie eNozaradan2Sylvie eNozaradan3Sylvie eNozaradan4Laurel J Trainor5Laurel J Trainor6Laurel J Trainor7McMaster UniversityMcMaster UniversityUniversite catholique de Louvain (UCL)International Laboratory for Brain, Music and Sound ResearchWestern Sydney UniversityMcMaster UniversityMcMaster UniversityBaycrest HospitalCaregivers often engage in musical interactions with their infants. For example, parents across cultures sing lullabies and playsongs to their infants from birth. Behavioral studies indicate that infants not only extract beat information, but also group these beats into metrical hierarchies by as early as 6 months of age. However, it is not known how this is accomplished in the infant brain. An EEG frequency-tagging approach has been used successfully with adults to measure neural entrainment to auditory rhythms. The current study is the first to use this technique with infants in order to investigate how infants’ brains encode rhythms. Furthermore, we examine how infant and parent musical background is associated with individual differences in rhythm encoding. In Experiment 1, EEG was recorded while 7-month-old infants listened to an ambiguous rhythmic pattern that could be perceived to be in two different meters. In Experiment 2, EEG was recorded while 15-month-old infants listened to a rhythmic pattern with an unambiguous meter. In both age groups, information about musical background (parent music training, infant music classes, hours of music listening) was collected. Both age groups showed clear EEG responses frequency-locked to the rhythms, at frequencies corresponding to both beat and meter. For the younger infants (Experiment 1), the amplitudes at duple meter frequencies were selectively enhanced for infants enrolled in music classes compared to those who had not engaged in such classes. For the older infants (Experiment 2), amplitudes at beat and meter frequencies were larger for infants with musically-trained compared to musically-untrained parents. These results suggest that the frequency-tagging method is sensitive to individual differences in beat and meter processing in infancy and could be used to track developmental changes.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnins.2016.00229/fullElectroencephalographyMusicInfancyRhythmmeterneural entrainment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura K Cirelli
Christina eSpinelli
Sylvie eNozaradan
Sylvie eNozaradan
Sylvie eNozaradan
Laurel J Trainor
Laurel J Trainor
Laurel J Trainor
spellingShingle Laura K Cirelli
Christina eSpinelli
Sylvie eNozaradan
Sylvie eNozaradan
Sylvie eNozaradan
Laurel J Trainor
Laurel J Trainor
Laurel J Trainor
Measuring neural entrainment to beat and meter in infants: Effects of music background
Frontiers in Neuroscience
Electroencephalography
Music
Infancy
Rhythm
meter
neural entrainment
author_facet Laura K Cirelli
Christina eSpinelli
Sylvie eNozaradan
Sylvie eNozaradan
Sylvie eNozaradan
Laurel J Trainor
Laurel J Trainor
Laurel J Trainor
author_sort Laura K Cirelli
title Measuring neural entrainment to beat and meter in infants: Effects of music background
title_short Measuring neural entrainment to beat and meter in infants: Effects of music background
title_full Measuring neural entrainment to beat and meter in infants: Effects of music background
title_fullStr Measuring neural entrainment to beat and meter in infants: Effects of music background
title_full_unstemmed Measuring neural entrainment to beat and meter in infants: Effects of music background
title_sort measuring neural entrainment to beat and meter in infants: effects of music background
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neuroscience
issn 1662-453X
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Caregivers often engage in musical interactions with their infants. For example, parents across cultures sing lullabies and playsongs to their infants from birth. Behavioral studies indicate that infants not only extract beat information, but also group these beats into metrical hierarchies by as early as 6 months of age. However, it is not known how this is accomplished in the infant brain. An EEG frequency-tagging approach has been used successfully with adults to measure neural entrainment to auditory rhythms. The current study is the first to use this technique with infants in order to investigate how infants’ brains encode rhythms. Furthermore, we examine how infant and parent musical background is associated with individual differences in rhythm encoding. In Experiment 1, EEG was recorded while 7-month-old infants listened to an ambiguous rhythmic pattern that could be perceived to be in two different meters. In Experiment 2, EEG was recorded while 15-month-old infants listened to a rhythmic pattern with an unambiguous meter. In both age groups, information about musical background (parent music training, infant music classes, hours of music listening) was collected. Both age groups showed clear EEG responses frequency-locked to the rhythms, at frequencies corresponding to both beat and meter. For the younger infants (Experiment 1), the amplitudes at duple meter frequencies were selectively enhanced for infants enrolled in music classes compared to those who had not engaged in such classes. For the older infants (Experiment 2), amplitudes at beat and meter frequencies were larger for infants with musically-trained compared to musically-untrained parents. These results suggest that the frequency-tagging method is sensitive to individual differences in beat and meter processing in infancy and could be used to track developmental changes.
topic Electroencephalography
Music
Infancy
Rhythm
meter
neural entrainment
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnins.2016.00229/full
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