scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Congenital amusia: a group study of adults afflicted with a music-specific disorder.

Julie Ayotte, +2 more
- 01 Feb 2002 - 
- Vol. 125, Iss: 2, pp 238-251
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The present study convincingly demonstrates the existence of congenital amusia as a new class of learning disabilities that affect musical abilities.
Abstract
The condition of congenital amusia, commonly known as tone-deafness, has been described for more than a century, but has received little empirical attention. In the present study, a research effort has been made to document in detail the behavioural manifestations of congenital amusia. A group of 11 adults, fitting stringent criteria of musical disabilities, were examined in a series of tests originally designed to assess the presence and specificity of musical disorders in brain-damaged patients. The results show that congenital amusia is related to severe deficiencies in processing pitch variations. The deficit extends to impairments in music memory and recognition as well as in singing and the ability to tap in time to music. Interestingly, the disorder appears specific to the musical domain. Congenital amusical individuals process and recognize speech, including speech prosody, common environmental sounds and human voices, as well as control subjects. Thus, the present study convincingly demonstrates the existence of congenital amusia as a new class of learning disabilities that affect musical abilities.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Language, music, syntax and the brain.

TL;DR: This review focuses on syntax, using recent neuroimaging data and cognitive theory to propose a specific point of convergence between syntactic processing in language and music, which leads to testable predictions, including the prediction that that syntactic comprehension problems in Broca's aphasia are not selective to language but influence music perception as well.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Ryerson Audio-Visual Database of Emotional Speech and Song (RAVDESS): A dynamic, multimodal set of facial and vocal expressions in North American English

TL;DR: The RAVDESS is a validated multimodal database of emotional speech and song consisting of 24 professional actors, vocalizing lexically-matched statements in a neutral North American accent, which shows high levels of emotional validity and test-retest intrarater reliability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modularity of music processing.

TL;DR: A functional architecture for music processing that captures the typical properties of modular organization is proposed, which rests essentially on the analysis of music-related deficits in neurologically impaired individuals but provides useful guidelines for exploring the music faculty in normal people, using methods such as neuroimaging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Varieties of musical disorders. The Montreal Battery of Evaluation of Amusia.

TL;DR: The Montreal Battery of Evaluation of Amusia (MBEA) is proposed to use because it is arguably the best tool currently available and theoretically motivated and satisfies important psychometric properties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sensitivity to musical emotion is influenced by tonal structure in congenital amusia

TL;DR: Investigation of congenital amusia, a lifelong disorder of musical processing, impacts sensitivity to musical emotion elicited by timbre and tonal system information finds amusics rated Western melodies as more tense compared to controls, as they relied less on tonality cues than controls in rating tension for Western melodies.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Familial aggregation of a developmental language disorder.

TL;DR: Data are presented that suggest that at least some cases of dysphasia are associated with an abnormality in a single dominant gene, and the results of a series of tests on a large three-generation family are reported, showing that abstract morphology is impaired in these subjects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deficits in auditory temporal and spectral resolution in language-impaired children.

TL;DR: The data support the view that language difficulties result from problems in auditory perception, and provide further information about the nature of these perceptual problems that should contribute to improving the diagnosis and treatment of language impairment and related disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contribution of different cortical areas in the temporal lobes to music processing.

TL;DR: This study highlights the relevance of dissociating musical abilities into their most significant cognitive components in order to identify their separate cerebral locations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Processing of local and global musical information by unilateral brain-damaged patients

TL;DR: Evidence of double dissociation between the processing of the pitch dimension and theprocessing of rhythm was obtained, providing further support for the need to fractionate musical perceptual abilities in order to arrive at a theory as to how the two hemispheres cohere to produce a musical interpretation of the auditory input.
Journal ArticleDOI

Congenital Amusia: A Disorder of Fine-Grained Pitch Discrimination

TL;DR: The results of psychophysical tests show that Monica has severe difficulties with detecting pitch changes, and the data suggest that music-processing difficulties may result from problems in fine-grained discrimination of pitch, much in the same way as many language- processing difficulties arise from deficiencies in auditory temporal resolution.
Related Papers (5)