2022
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-07568-8
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A specific relationship between musical sophistication and auditory working memory

Abstract: Previous studies have found conflicting results between individual measures related to music and fundamental aspects of auditory perception and cognition. The results have been difficult to compare because of different musical measures being used and lack of uniformity in the auditory perceptual and cognitive measures. In this study we used a general construct of musicianship, musical sophistication, that can be applied to populations with widely different backgrounds. We investigated the relationship between … Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
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“…Future work may further benefit from using full musical sophistication indices, such as the Ollen Musical Sophistication Index and Goldsmiths Musical Sophistication Index (Müllensiefen et al, 2014), as a more granular and continuous measure of musicianship, rather than limiting analyses to a group comparison with a cut point. This may also be particularly interesting in the context of SFG task performance, as Lad et al (2022) found that scores on the Goldsmiths Musical Sophistication Index were correlated with a sound frequency subconstruct of working memory, but not other subconstructs.…”
Section: Musicianshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Future work may further benefit from using full musical sophistication indices, such as the Ollen Musical Sophistication Index and Goldsmiths Musical Sophistication Index (Müllensiefen et al, 2014), as a more granular and continuous measure of musicianship, rather than limiting analyses to a group comparison with a cut point. This may also be particularly interesting in the context of SFG task performance, as Lad et al (2022) found that scores on the Goldsmiths Musical Sophistication Index were correlated with a sound frequency subconstruct of working memory, but not other subconstructs.…”
Section: Musicianshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, our finding that discrimination thresholds in musicians are best for flat-spectrum tones is unlikely to be due to salience conferred by acoustics, because under this explanation, we should have found better thresholds for flat-spectrum complex tones in non-musicians and in all of the sub-groups of musicians, although perhaps musicians are better at extracting pitch from natural sounds despite jitter and a lower harmonic-to-noise ratio. Another possibility is that the advantage relates to better working memory for frequency in people with musical experience, which has been previously demonstrated for pure tones ( Lad et al , 2020 ; Lad et al , 2022 ). Our task likely engaged working memory, because it required participants to compare tones that were separated by 1050 ms.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…As an aside, the study of Lad et al (2022) also examined links between musicality and acoustic WM and found a significant correlation. There is a longstanding debate about whether musicians have greater perceptual abilities relevant to music such as frequency discrimination: see ( Moore et al, 2019 ) for a recent investigation and discussion.…”
Section: Auditory Cognitive Mechanisms For Speech-in-noise Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is a longstanding debate about whether musicians have greater perceptual abilities relevant to music such as frequency discrimination: see ( Moore et al, 2019 ) for a recent investigation and discussion. In a further study ( Lad et al, 2022 ) the correlation between musicianship (based on the Goldsmith’s Musical Sophistication Index) and perceptual discrimination and WM for frequency was examined. The study showed a correlation with frequency WM but not perception of frequency.…”
Section: Auditory Cognitive Mechanisms For Speech-in-noise Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%