DocumentCode
3685468
Title
Acoustic pressure reduction at rhythm deviants causes magnetoencephalographic response
Author
Yuya Takeshita;Koichi Yokosawa
Author_Institution
Graduate school of Health Sciences, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, 060-0812, Japan
fYear
2015
Firstpage
6650
Lastpage
6653
Abstract
Rhythm is an element of music and is important for determining the impression of the music. To investigate the mechanism by which musical rhythmic changes are perceived, magnetoencephalographic responses to rhythm deviants were recorded from 11 healthy volunteers. Auditory stimuli consisting of physically controlled tones were adapted from a song. The auditory stimuli had a steady rhythm, but “early” and “late” deviants were inserted. Only the “early” deviant, which was a tone with a short duration, caused N100m-like prominent transient responses at around the offset of the deviant tone. The latency of the prominent response depended on the descending sound pressure of the deviant tone and was 65 ms after 50% descent. The results suggest that unexpected shortening of tone in a continuous rhythm evokes a transient response and that the response is caused by descending sound pressure of the shortened tone itself, not by the following tones.
Keywords
"Rhythm","Transient response","Standards","Transient analysis","Surfaces","Magnetoacoustic effects"
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2015 37th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
ISSN
1094-687X
Electronic_ISBN
1558-4615
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/EMBC.2015.7319918
Filename
7319918
Link To Document