About DBIS   | Story archive   | Contact DBIS  | DBIS home

Turning Brainwaves Into Music

Philosophers Create Symphonies From Brain Scans, Could be Used to Diagnose Schizophrenia

July 1, 2010

Philosophers devised a method to turn brain scans into music. The resulting music depicts a 'soundtrack' of your mind, giving active areas of the brain different musical notes and increasing the volume as the activity increases. Researchers created musical translations using the brain activity of people young and old, as well as those with schizophrenia. While the music associated with older persons does not differ very much from the younger, the music created by schizophrenic brains tends to sound more jazz-like, as things drift in and out of sync. Researchers say that this method could one day possibly be used to diagnose conditions, much like visual scans today.

read the full story...

Science Insider

WHAT IS fMRI: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) uses radio waves and a strong magnetic field rather than X-rays to take clear and detailed pictures of internal organs and tissues. fMRI or functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging uses this technology to identify regions of the brain where blood vessels are expanding, chemical changes are taking place, or extra oxygen is being delivered. These are indications that a particular part of the brain is processing information and giving commands to the body. As a patient performs a particular task, her metabolism will increase in the brain area responsible for that task, changing the signal in the image. Analyzing the images to understand how responses are similar or different for different tasks allows scientists to better understand the patient as an individual, and also to learn more about the human brain in general.

HOW THE BRAIN PROCESSES MUSIC: When we listen to music, sound waves enter the ear and cause specific parts in the middle and inner ear to vibrate in response to the stimulation. This converts sound into an electrical signal that travels up the brain stem to the auditory cortex located in the temporal lobe on both right and left sides of the brain. If the temporal lobe becomes damaged, a person may have trouble singing a song, playing an instrument, or keeping rhythm. There is even a rare condition in which someone can't recognize musical melodies, yet has no trouble hearing speech or other sounds. Some studies have found that music is mostly processed by the right side of the brain, while others found the left side to be more dominant. MRI scans of people listening to music have shown that music activates many different parts of the brain in different people, including the visual cortex. This is because listening to music involves many different brain functions, such as memory, learning and emotions. But there's one section that seems to be activated in everyone: the rostromedial prefrontal cortex (RPC). It can be found near the center of the forehead, and is linked to short- and long-term memory. This part of the brain seems to be where maps of melodies are stored. Whenever a person hears a musical pattern, a matching pattern is set up in the RPC. Perfect pitch, on the other hand, seems to be related to a tiny region called the left planum temporal, which is also involved in language processing.

The American Association of Physicists in Medicine contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.

Video help

Latest stories

  • Brains Vs. Social Butterflies: Which is Better?
  • Breakthrough for Blindness
  • Discover Galaxies on the Web
  • Escaping a Submarine
  • Global Warming & The Feedback Effect

More information on this story

On the Web: Music of the Brain

To Go Inside This Science:
Dan Lloyd
www.trincoll.edu/~dlloyd
dan.lloyd@trincoll.edu

Dr. Sudarshan Chamakuri
Medical Physicist
American Association of Physicists in Medicine
RADIATIONTHERAPY@HOTMAIL.COM


© 2010 American Institute of Physics