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Enjoying music consistently engages key structures of the neural auditory and reward systems such as the right superior temporal gyrus (R STG) and ventral striatum (VS). Expectations seem to play a central role in this effect, as preferences reliably vary according to listeners' uncertainty about the musical future and surprise about the musical past. Accordingly, VS activity reflects the pleasure of musical surprise, and exhibits stronger correlations with R STG activity as pleasure grows. Yet the reward value of musical surprise - and thus the reason for these surprises engaging the reward system - remains an open question. Recent models of predictive neural processing and learning suggest that forming, testing, and updating hypotheses about one's environment may be intrinsically rewarding, and that the constantly evolving structure of musical patterns could provide ample opportunity for this procedure. Consistent with these accounts, our group previously found that listeners tend to prefer melodic excerpts taken from real music when it either validates their uncertain melodic predictions (i.e., is high in uncertainty and low in surprise) or when it challenges their highly confident ones (i.e., is low in uncertainty and high in surprise). An independent research group (Cheung et al., 2019) replicated these results with musical chord sequences, and identified their fMRI correlates in the STG, amygdala, and hippocampus but not the VS, raising new questions about the neural mechanisms of musical pleasure that the present study seeks to address. Here, we assessed concurrent liking ratings and hemodynamic fMRI signals as 24 participants listened to 50 naturalistic, real-world musical excerpts that varied across wide spectra of computationally modeled uncertainty and surprise. As in previous studies, liking ratings exhibited an interaction between uncertainty and surprise, with the strongest preferences for high uncertainty/low surprise and low uncertainty/high surprise. FMRI results also replicated previous findings, with music liking effects in the R STG and VS. Furthermore, we identify interactions between uncertainty and surprise on the one hand, and liking and surprise on the other, in VS activity. Altogether, these results provide important support for the hypothesized role of the VS in deriving pleasure from learning about musical structure.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1209398 | DOI Listing |
J Law Med
July 2025
Senior Legal Counsel, Carroll O'Dea Lawyers & Adjunct Professor, Australian Centre for Health Law Research, Queensland University of Technology.
Arguably, mandatory consent and informed consent should extend to mandatory informed financial consent (IFC), for all health practitioners where patients will incur costs to avoid the toxic effects of surprise invoices. Broad ethical and conduct guidance can be found in documents such as the 2020 Medical Board of Australia Good Medical Practice Code of Conduct and the 2024 Australian Medical Association (AMA) IFC position statement. The AMA expectation is clear enough that every medical practitioner should ensure that their patients are fully aware of their fees and that they encourage open discussion with their patients about health care costs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
August 2025
Department of Neuroscience, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, United States.
Signaling dynamics are crucial in biological systems, and biosensor-based real-time imaging has revolutionized their analysis. Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) excels over the widely used fluorescence intensity imaging by allowing the measurement of absolute signal levels independent of sensor concentration. This capability enables the comparison of signaling dynamics across different animals, body regions, and timeframes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeerJ
August 2025
School of Psychology, The Northwest Normal University, Lanzhou, Gansu, China.
Background: Previous studies have shown that intolerance of uncertainty (IU) and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) are closely interrelated. This reliance on scale totals to measure symptom severity obscures the distinctions and connections between different symptoms. In the present study, we explored the relationships between different components of IU and symptoms of OCD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychophysiology
July 2025
Graduate School of Human Sciences, The University of Osaka, Osaka, Japan.
In active inference, the sensory surprisal (a log-probability of sensory data) of the prediction error between prediction and sensory input is modulated by action. The urge to move (groove) induced by syncopation, which provides metric uncertainty, can be considered a case of active inference in music perception. The present study investigated whether rhythmic prediction error is modulated by improving the precision of rhythm perception through tapping in sync with the rhythm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
July 2025
Department of Cognition, Development and Educational Psychology, Institute of Neurosciences, University of Barcelona, Barcelona 08035, Spain.
Current models suggest that musical pleasure is tied to the intrinsic reward of learning, as it relies on predictive processes that challenge our minds. According to predictive coding, optimal learning, which maximizes epistemic value, depends on balancing predictability and uncertainty, implying that musical pleasure should also reflect this equilibrium. We tested this idea in two independent large samples using a novel decision-making paradigm, where participants indicated preferences for melodies varying in surprise and entropy.
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