springer | The relationship between structural processing in music and language has
received increasing interest in the past several years, spurred by the
influential Shared Syntactic Integration Resource Hypothesis (SSIRH; Patel, Nature Neuroscience, 6, 674–681, 2003).
According to this resource-sharing framework, music and language rely
on separable syntactic representations but recruit shared cognitive
resources to integrate these representations into evolving structures.
The SSIRH is supported by findings of interactions between structural
manipulations in music and language. However, other recent evidence
suggests that such interactions also can arise with nonstructural
manipulations, and some recent neuroimaging studies report largely
nonoverlapping neural regions involved in processing musical and
linguistic structure. These conflicting results raise the question of
exactly what shared (and distinct) resources underlie musical and
linguistic structural processing. This paper suggests that one shared
resource is prefrontal cortical mechanisms of cognitive control,
which are recruited to detect and resolve conflict that occurs when
expectations are violated and interpretations must be revised. By this
account, musical processing involves not just the incremental processing
and integration of musical elements as they occur, but also the
incremental generation of musical predictions and expectations, which
must sometimes be overridden and revised in light of evolving musical
input.
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