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Decoding expectation and surprise in dementia: the paradigm of music

Authors :
Elia Benhamou
Jennifer M. Nicholas
Jeremy C. S. Johnson
Sijia Zhao
Janneke E P van Leeuwen
Maï-Carmen Requena-Komuro
Lucy L. Russell
Harri Sivasathiaseelan
Jason D. Warren
Caroline V. Greaves
Chris J.D. Hardy
Rebecca L. Bond
Jonathan D. Rohrer
Annabel Nelson
Source :
Brain Communications
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2021.

Abstract

Making predictions about the world and responding appropriately to unexpected events are essential functions of the healthy brain. In neurodegenerative disorders, such as frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, impaired processing of ‘surprise’ may underpin a diverse array of symptoms, particularly abnormalities of social and emotional behaviour, but is challenging to characterize. Here, we addressed this issue using a novel paradigm: music. We studied 62 patients (24 female; aged 53–88) representing major syndromes of frontotemporal dementia (behavioural variant, semantic variant primary progressive aphasia, non-fluent-agrammatic variant primary progressive aphasia) and typical amnestic Alzheimer’s disease, in relation to 33 healthy controls (18 female; aged 54–78). Participants heard famous melodies containing no deviants or one of three types of deviant note—acoustic (white-noise burst), syntactic (key-violating pitch change) or semantic (key-preserving pitch change). Using a regression model that took elementary perceptual, executive and musical competence into account, we assessed accuracy detecting melodic deviants and simultaneously recorded pupillary responses and related these to deviant surprise value (information-content) and carrier melody predictability (entropy), calculated using an unsupervised machine learning model of music. Neuroanatomical associations of deviant detection accuracy and coupling of detection to deviant surprise value were assessed using voxel-based morphometry of patients’ brain MRI. Whereas Alzheimer’s disease was associated with normal deviant detection accuracy, behavioural and semantic variant frontotemporal dementia syndromes were associated with strikingly similar profiles of impaired syntactic and semantic deviant detection accuracy and impaired behavioural and autonomic sensitivity to deviant information-content (all P<br />Benhamou et al. report that major dementias have distinct behavioural, autonomic and neuroanatomical profiles of musical ‘surprise’ processing. While Alzheimer’s disease patients showed normal reactivity to deviants in familiar melodies, frontotemporal dementia patients had specific impairments, suggesting that musical ‘tools’ could measure complex behavioural changes in these diseases.<br />Graphical Abstract Graphical Abstract

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26321297
Volume :
3
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8af7633f60989ab3c9facccd99ee7bfc