Distributional learning of musical pitch despite tone deafness in individuals with congenital amusia

Author:

Zhu Jiaqiang1,Chen Xiaoxiang2,Chen Fei2,Zhang Caicai1ORCID,Shao Jing3,Wiener Seth4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Centre for Language, Cognition, and Neuroscience, Department of Chinese and Bilingual Studies, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University 1 , Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China

2. School of Foreign Languages, Hunan University 2 , Changsha, China

3. Department of English Language and Literature, Hong Kong Baptist University 3 , Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China

4. Department of Modern Languages, Carnegie Mellon University 4 , Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, USA

Abstract

Congenital amusia is an innate and lifelong deficit of music processing. This study investigated whether adult listeners with amusia were still able to learn pitch-related musical chords based on stimulus frequency of statistical distribution, i.e., via distributional learning. Following a pretest-training-posttest design, 18 amusics and 19 typical, musically intact listeners were assigned to bimodal and unimodal conditions that differed in distribution of the stimuli. Participants' task was to discriminate chord minimal pairs, which were transposed to a novel microtonal scale. Accuracy rates for each test session were collected and compared between the two groups using generalized mixed-effects models. Results showed that amusics were less accurate than typical listeners at all comparisons, thus corroborating previous findings. Importantly, amusics—like typical listeners—demonstrated perceptual gains from pretest to posttest in the bimodal condition (but not the unimodal condition). The findings reveal that amusics' distributional learning of music remains largely preserved despite their deficient music processing. Implications of the results for statistical learning and intervention programs to mitigate amusia are discussed.

Funder

the Humanities and Social Science Project of Ministry of Education of China

the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China

Publisher

Acoustical Society of America (ASA)

Subject

Acoustics and Ultrasonics,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)

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