Subdivisions
subdivisions
Tapping the beat of four subdivisions: Neural entrainment, musical training and the binary advantage
The subdivision benefit refers to the positive effect of subdividing a beat on sensorimotor synchronization. We recorded electroencephalograms of musicians and non-musicians to study how they listened or finger-tapped to a beat, subdivided into four distinct subdivisions. Musicians showed more consistent tapping responses than non-musicians, and enhanced neural entrainment during the tapping task than in the listening task. In both groups, there was a neural enhancement of the beat frequency and its first harmonic (related to duplets) after listening to the four subdivisions. Furthermore, non-musicians tapped more consistently to the beat of duplets than other subdivisions. Altogether, this suggests a neural and behavioral advantage for binary subdivisions, that can be modulated with formal training in music.
Connectional subdivisions reflect neuronal features of the various sectors of the macaque ventrolateral prefrontal cortex
FENS Forum 2024
Exploring laryngeal effects of dorsolateral periaqueductal grey stimulation in anesthetized rats: Implications for c-Fos and FOXP2 expression in the nucleus ambiguus subdivisions
FENS Forum 2024
The impact of the retinotopic subdivisions of area V1 on shaping the macaque connectome
FENS Forum 2024
Projections from the ventral nucleus of the trapezoid body to all subdivisions of the rat cochlear nucleus
FENS Forum 2024
Searching for input-output connectivity streams in the various subdivisions of mouse orbitofrontal cortex
FENS Forum 2024