The neural architecture of music-evoked autobiographical memories.

TitleThe neural architecture of music-evoked autobiographical memories.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsJanata P
JournalCereb Cortex
Volume19
Issue11
Pagination2579-94
Date Published2009 Nov
ISSN1460-2199
KeywordsAdolescent, Autobiographies as Topic, Cues, Emotions, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Memory, Mental Recall, Music, Prefrontal Cortex, Self Concept, Young Adult
Abstract

The medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) is regarded as a region of the brain that supports self-referential processes, including the integration of sensory information with self-knowledge and the retrieval of autobiographical information. I used functional magnetic resonance imaging and a novel procedure for eliciting autobiographical memories with excerpts of popular music dating to one's extended childhood to test the hypothesis that music and autobiographical memories are integrated in the MPFC. Dorsal regions of the MPFC (Brodmann area 8/9) were shown to respond parametrically to the degree of autobiographical salience experienced over the course of individual 30 s excerpts. Moreover, the dorsal MPFC also responded on a second, faster timescale corresponding to the signature movements of the musical excerpts through tonal space. These results suggest that the dorsal MPFC associates music and memories when we experience emotionally salient episodic memories that are triggered by familiar songs from our personal past. MPFC acted in concert with lateral prefrontal and posterior cortices both in terms of tonality tracking and overall responsiveness to familiar and autobiographically salient songs. These findings extend the results of previous autobiographical memory research by demonstrating the spontaneous activation of an autobiographical memory network in a naturalistic task with low retrieval demands.

DOI10.1093/cercor/bhp008
Alternate JournalCereb. Cortex
PubMed ID19240137
PubMed Central IDPMC2758676
Grant ListDC05146 / DC / NIDCD NIH HHS / United States