From perception to pleasure: Music and its neural substrates
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital · McGill University · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Music has existed in human societies since prehistory, perhaps because it allows expression and regulation of emotion and evokes pleasure. In this review, we present findings from cognitive neuroscience that bear on the question of how we get from perception of sound patterns to pleasurable responses. First, we identify some of the auditory cortical circuits that are responsible for encoding and storing tonal patterns and discuss evidence that cortical loops between auditory and frontal cortices are important for maintaining musical information in working memory and for the recognition of structural regularities in musical patterns, which then lead to expectancies. Second, we review evidence concerning the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 14.57
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 134
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Pleasure
- Cognitive neuroscience of music
- Psychology
- Perception
- Cognitive psychology
- Reward system
- Neuroscience
- Auditory cortex