Skip to main content
Clinical Medicine logoLink to Clinical Medicine
. 2008 Feb 1;8(1):32–36. doi: 10.7861/clinmedicine.8-1-32

How does the brain process music?

Jason Warren 1
PMCID: PMC4953706  PMID: 18335666

Abstract

The organisation of the musical brain is a major focus of interest in contemporary neuroscience. This reflects the increasing sophistication of tools (especially imaging techniques) to examine brain anatomy and function in health and disease, and the recognition that music provides unique insights into a number of aspects of nonverbal brain function. The emerging picture is complex but coherent, and moves beyond older ideas of music as the province of a single brain area or hemisphere to the concept of music as a ‘whole-brain’ phenomenon. Music engages a distributed set of cortical modules that process different perceptual, cognitive and emotional components with varying selectivity. ‘Why’ rather than ‘how’ the brain processes music is a key challenge for the future.

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (1.1 MB).


Articles from Clinical Medicine are provided here courtesy of Royal College of Physicians

RESOURCES