According to a new study, people who do not like music at all may have a condition called specific musical anhedonia which is thought to be the result of reduced connectivity between two regions in the brain linked to sound processing and reward, this could affect up to five per cent of the population.
Researchers at the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) and Hospital of McGill University in Canada along with the University of Barcelona in Spain have found that people with this condition showed reduced functional connectivity between cortical regions responsible for processing sound and subcortical regions related to reward.
Researchers recruited 45 healthy participants who completed a questionnaire measuring their level of sensitivity to music and divided them into three groups of sensitivity based on their responses.
The test subjects then listened to music excerpts inside an fMRI machine while providing pleasure ratings in real-time.
To control for their brain response to other reward types, participants also played a monetary gambling task in which they could win or lose real money.
Using the fMRI data, researchers found that while listening to music, specific musical anhedonics presented a reduction in the activity of the Nucleus Accumbens, a key subcortical structure of the reward network.
The reduction was not related to a general improper functioning of the Nucleus Accumbens itself, since this region was activated when they won money in the gambling task.
Specific musical anhedonics, however, did show reduced functional connectivity between cortical regions associated with auditory processing and the Nucleus Accumbens.
In contrast, individuals with high sensitivity to music showed enhanced connectivity.
The fact that subjects could be insensible to music while still responsive to another stimulus like money suggests different pathways to reward for different stimuli.
This finding may pave the way for the detailed study of the neural substrates underlying other domain-specific anhedonias and, from an evolutionary perspective, help us to understand how music acquired reward value.
Lack of brain connectivity has been shown to be responsible for other deficits in cognitive ability.
Studies of children with autism spectrum disorder, for example, have shown that their inability to experience the human voice as pleasurable may be explained by a reduced coupling between the bilateral posterior superior temporal sulcus and distributed nodes of the reward system, including the Nucleus Accumbens.
This latest research reinforces the importance of neural connectivity in the reward response of human beings.
“These findings not only help us to understand individual variability in the way the reward system functions, but also can be applied to the development of therapies for treatment of reward-related disorders, including apathy, depression and addiction,” said Robert Zatorre from MNI.
The study was published in the journal PNAS.
Do you know anyone that doesn’t like music? What would you do if music wasn’t available?
Good morning!
I like music.
Hello
Hey ho.
who are you calling a ho!?
I wonder if Lee saw this
Norway’s controversial radio switch-off
Norway will start switching off its FM radio network next week, in a controversial move that will be closely watched by other nations.
The shutdown of the FM (frequency modulation) network will start in the northern city of Bodo on 11 January. By the end of the year, all national FM broadcasts will end.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-38529435
No comma
Good morning!
Hi Janet
Grant Lawrence, King of the Forest, is downstairs sleeping.
OH HELLOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ptfmAY6M6aA
is he passed out on a half-eaten pile of chocolate chip cookies?
if you are a Replacements fan, I highly recommend looking up the I Don’t Cares, a band made up of Paul Westerberg and Juliana Hatfield. Very good stuff. A lot of it rocks along like Alex Chilton*
*the Replacements’ song. Not the actual singer
Krib: No, The pile of cookies has been put into plastic bags and he is happily wearing his shoes in the house.
Now to get up, dressed and go downstairs to see if the boy has gotten into any mischief.
Good morning everyone!
case in point
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4geuUkZzzig
Good gosh, that guy sure can sleep in. It’s 9:10am now, and we need to leave by 10am so that we can get up to Chico for the noon tour at Sierra Nevada Brewery – a great tour if you’re ever in Northern California. But if we don’t, we don’t.
I’ve got a blog post about 1/3 written about the Smugglers show in Berkeley on Saturday. It was pretty epic. Grant tried to perform like he was 20 again, and damn near killed him. Or at least he said he thought he was going to have a heart attack! It’ll be finished this week, and Garry said he’s gathering YouTube videos of the show to add to it. There were people there at the show from Vancouver, of course, but also from all over the US. But there were no other R3ers that we saw. Then again, the Smugglers era was pretty much over when Grant’s time at Radio3 began, so they didn’t really overlap.
@Lee, he has often admitted to arriving at the Ceeb just in time for his show
I am still waiting for that guy to post the Smugglers set
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8tAnV9M2FKiJF2pDbXU0hw
Did you wake him up yet?
Hi Darleen. Glad to see that there is someone here. No, haven’t tried to wake him, and our window to go to the tour at Sierra Nevada is just about closed, as it take two hours to get there and we haven’t eaten breakfast yet. He must be really sleeping, as who can sleep through the smell of frying bacon? But he did look really exhausted last night.
Garry, I’ll ask Grant if he has a copy of the set list. They did play all of the Smugglers songs I was familiar with.
Hi Lee! I guess you should let the old boy sleep. I imagine the show took a lot out of him. Looks like it was a great success. Say hi for me.
@Lee, have you tried waving a cookie under his nose or opening a beer near him (or just playing the sound of one being opened)
Garry, we’re taking Darleen’s suggestion. It’s pretty quiet in the house now, but I have cooked bacon, made coffee, and tried to indicate that there was life in the house. Maybe if he isn’t up by noon I’ll look in on him. What’s funny is that I told him we had to leave by 10, but going to the brewery was strictly something we set up for him, and he didn’t have to go if he didn’t want to, but he was insistent that he did want to! Oh, well. And I’ve stopped waiting to him to get up to make breakfast!
He will probably be all “How dare you not wake me up!”. Haha!
Grant posted the setlist on facebook
Rosie
Buddy Holly Convention
To Serve and Protect
Vancouver BC
Flying Buttress of Love
She Ain’t No Egyptian
Bishy Bishy
Larry Where Are You
Boozecan
Rock Thy Neighbour
Especially You
Rock n Roll Was Never This Fun
Oh yeah, Darbar, I expect that. Considering that Peggy and I – we both took the day off – have already eaten breakfast!
The thing with their performance, Grant performed it like he was still 20. He forgot he’s aged about 25 years. Took a lot out of the boy.
that’s, what, a half hour of music?
I guess in old-man-rocker time, that’s closer to 90 minutes, though 😛
Kirby, they had a 45 minute set. And they made the most of it.
Wait! Wait! He’s up! He’s alive! We didn’t kill Grant Lawrence!
WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
HELLO BLOG!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It’s GL!
I AM IN THE LUXOR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I slept like King Tut in this place.
How’d you get so funky…
Hi All!
Did anyone ever notice that GL and LG have reversed initials? they are like a palindrome when put together!
still, in old-man-rocker time…
Go look on Facebook. Grant just picked and ate a fresh orange.
HI GRANT!!!
Hi Gang! Happy New year!
Happy New Year to you Funhug!