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Instrument specificity in experienced musicians
Authors:Drost Ulrich C  Rieger Martina  Prinz Wolfgang
Affiliation: a Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Munich, Germanyb Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany
Abstract:Previous studies have shown that experienced pianists have acquired integrated action-effect (A-E) associations. In the present study, we were interested in how specific these associations are for the own instrument by investigating pianists and guitarists. A-E associations were examined by testing whether the perception of a “potential” action-effect has an influence on actions. Participants played chords on their instrument in response to visual stimuli, while they were presented task-irrelevant auditory distractors (congruent or incongruent) in varying instrument timbre. In Experiment 1, pianists exhibited an interference effect with timbres of their own instrument category (keyboard instruments: piano and organ). In Experiment 2 guitarists showed an interference effect only with guitar timbre. Thus, integrated A-E associations primarily seem to consist of a specific component on a sensory-motor level involving the own instrument. Additionally, categorical knowledge about how an instrument is played seems to be involved.
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