Guitar distortion used in rock music modifies a chord so that new frequencies appear in its harmonic structure. A distorted dyad (power chord) has a special role in heavy metal music due to its harmonics that create a major third interval, making it similar to a major chord. We investigated how distortion affects cortical auditory processing of chords in musicians and nonmusicians. Electric guitar chords with or without distortion and with or without the interval of the major third (i.e., triads or dyads) were presented in an oddball design where one of them served as a repeating standard stimulus and others served as occasional deviants. This enabled the recording of event-related potentials (ERPs) of the electroencephalogram (EEG) related to deviance processing (the mismatch negativity MMN and the attention-related P3a component) in an ignore condition. MMN and P3a responses were elicited in most paradigms. Distorted chords in a nondistorted context only elicited early P3a responses. However, the power chord did not demonstrate a special role in the level of the ERPs. Earlier and larger MMN and P3a responses were elicited when distortion was modified compared to when only harmony (triad vs. dyad) was modified between standards and deviants. The MMN responses were largest when distortion and harmony deviated simultaneously. Musicians demonstrated larger P3a responses than nonmusicians. The results suggest mostly independent cortical auditory processing of distortion and harmony in Western individuals, and facilitated chord change processing in musicians compared to nonmusicians. While distortion has been used in heavy rock music for decades, this study is among the first ones to shed light on its cortical basis.
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February 2018
Research Article|
February 01 2018
Distortion and Western Music Chord Processing: An ERP Study of Musicians and Nonmusicians
Paula Virtala,
1University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
Dr. Paula Virtala, University of Helsinki, Cognitive Brain Research Unit, P.O. Box 9, FIN-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland. E-mail paula.virtala@helsinki.fi
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Minna Huotilainen,
Minna Huotilainen
1University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
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Mari Tervaniemi
Mari Tervaniemi
University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
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Dr. Paula Virtala, University of Helsinki, Cognitive Brain Research Unit, P.O. Box 9, FIN-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland. E-mail paula.virtala@helsinki.fi
Music Perception (2018) 35 (3): 315–331.
Article history
Received:
May 18 2016
Accepted:
June 24 2017
Citation
Paula Virtala, Minna Huotilainen, Esa Lilja, Juha Ojala, Mari Tervaniemi; Distortion and Western Music Chord Processing: An ERP Study of Musicians and Nonmusicians. Music Perception 1 February 2018; 35 (3): 315–331. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/mp.2018.35.3.315
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