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Intonation processing in congenital amusia: discrimination, identification and imitation
Author(s) -
Fang Liu,
Aniruddh D. Patel,
Adrian Fourcin,
Lauren Stewart
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/awq089
Subject(s) - intonation (linguistics) , psychology , imitation , audiology , perception , pitch perception , pitch (music) , speech perception , cognitive psychology , language disorder , cognition , linguistics , neuroscience , medicine , philosophy
This study investigated whether congenital amusia, a neuro-developmental disorder of musical perception, also has implications for speech intonation processing. In total, 16 British amusics and 16 matched controls completed five intonation perception tasks and two pitch threshold tasks. Compared with controls, amusics showed impaired performance on discrimination, identification and imitation of statements and questions that were characterized primarily by pitch direction differences in the final word. This intonation-processing deficit in amusia was largely associated with a psychophysical pitch direction discrimination deficit. These findings suggest that amusia impacts upon one's language abilities in subtle ways, and support previous evidence that pitch processing in language and music involves shared mechanisms.

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