JOURNAL ARTICLE

Lexical tone perception in musicians and non-musicians

Abstract

It has been suggested that music and speech maintain entirely dissociable mental processing systems. The current study, however, provides evidence that there is an overlap in the processing of certain shared aspects of the two. This study focuses on fundamental frequency (pitch), which is an essential component of melodic units in music and lexical and/or intonational units in speech. We hypothesize that extensive experience with the processing of musical pitch can transfer to a lexical pitch-processing domain. To that end, we asked nine English-speaking musicians and nine Englishspeaking non-musicians to identify and discriminate the four lexical tones of Mandarin Chinese. The subjects performed significantly differently on both tasks; the musicians identified the tones with 89% accuracy and discriminated them with 87% accuracy, while the non-musicians identified them with only 69% accuracy and discriminated them with 71% accuracy. These results provide counter-evidence to the theory of dissociation between music and speech processing.

Keywords:
Tone (literature) Perception Computer science Speech recognition Natural language processing Artificial intelligence Linguistics Psychology Philosophy

Metrics

145
Cited By
0.60
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
19
Refs
0.61
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Neuroscience and Music Perception
Life Sciences →  Neuroscience →  Cognitive Neuroscience
Phonetics and Phonology Research
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Multisensory perception and integration
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

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