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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/31432
Title: From Beat to Memory: Rhythmic Priming Effects on Verbal Memory Performance
Authors: Owusu, Bre-Anna R.
Advisor: Service, Elisabet
Department: Neuroscience
Keywords: Auditory Processing;Linguistic Processing;Rhythmic Priming;Sentence Repetition;Verbal Memory
Publication Date: 2025
Abstract: Listening to musical rhythms has been reported to enhance performance on language tasks for people with typical and atypical language abilities. In children and adults, priming with predictable rhythms (i.e., short-term rhythmic stimulation with music) has been shown to facilitate grammaticality judgements, even among children and adults with poor rhythm processing skills. Children and adults with atypical language skills have been better able to identify incorrect grammar within sentences when they have been primed with a predictable musical beat compared to an unpredictable beat or sound scene. Until the present thesis, to our knowledge there is no research demonstrating whether these beneficial rhythmic priming effects extend to verbal memory in children and adults. In Chapter 2, I report the finding that 9–11-year-old children with and without dyslexia may be unable to better recognize novel words when first primed with a predictable musical rhythm compared to an unpredictable environmental sound scene. Furthermore, children were better at judging grammatical and ungrammatical sentences after listening to an unpredictable environmental sound scene. However, in Chapter 3, I found that listening to a predictable musical rhythm compared to an environmental sound scene before repeating a nonsense sentence may enhance immediate recall from verbal memory in both adult musicians and non-musicians. Chapter 4 examines how the tempo of the predictable musical rhythm affects the priming of nonsensical sentences during passive listening. No ideal tempo amongst slow, moderate, and fast tempi could be detected. Together, these data show that rhythmic priming does not consistently provide benefits for verbal memory or specific language tasks. As such, this work makes contributions to the understanding of the interactions between rhythm, speech, and memory, and provides future considerations for investigating rhythmic priming and its potential connections to rehabilitation research.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/31432
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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