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Individual differences in neural markers of beat processing relate to spoken grammar skills in six-year-old children
Ist Teil von
Brain and language, 2023-11, Vol.246, p.105345-105345, Article 105345
Ort / Verlag
Netherlands: Elsevier Inc
Erscheinungsjahr
2023
Quelle
MEDLINE
Beschreibungen/Notizen
•Individual differences in music and language skills are associated.•Neural responses to rhythm predict ability in complex structural dependencies.•Neural entrainment may sustain hierarchical processing in music and language.
Based on the idea that neural entrainment establishes regular attentional fluctuations that facilitate hierarchical processing in both music and language, we hypothesized that individual differences in syntactic (grammatical) skills will be partly explained by patterns of neural responses to musical rhythm. To test this hypothesis, we recorded neural activity using electroencephalography (EEG) while children (N = 25) listened passively to rhythmic patterns that induced different beat percepts. Analysis of evoked beta and gamma activity revealed that individual differences in the magnitude of neural responses to rhythm explained variance in six-year-olds’ expressive grammar abilities, beyond and complementarily to their performance in a behavioral rhythm perception task. These results reinforce the idea that mechanisms of neural beat entrainment may be a shared neural resource supporting hierarchical processing across music and language and suggest a relevant marker of the relationship between rhythm processing and grammar abilities in elementary-school-age children, previously observed only behaviorally.