Why would Musical Training Benefit the Neural Encoding of Speech? The OPERA Hypothesis
Neurosciences Institute · John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Abstract
Mounting evidence suggests that musical training benefits the neural encoding of speech. This paper offers a hypothesis specifying why such benefits occur. The "OPERA" hypothesis proposes that such benefits are driven by adaptive plasticity in speech-processing networks, and that this plasticity occurs when five conditions are met. These are: (1) Overlap: there is anatomical overlap in the brain networks that process an acoustic feature used in both music and speech (e.g., waveform periodicity, amplitude envelope), (2) Precision: music places higher demands on these shared networks than does speech, in terms of the precision of processing, (3) Emotion: the musical activities that engage this network elicit…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 15.05
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 108
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Musical
- Speech recognition
- Encoding (memory)
- Repetition (rhetorical device)
- Cognitive psychology
- Computer science
- Linguistics
- Quality Education