Intercentral Relations of the Human EEG during Listening to Music

Different musical styles and intensities produce characteristic patterns of changes in the correlation of neocortical biopotentials. Classical music of three intensities and rock music of medium and high intensities were shown to produce asymmetry in the pattern of coherence (Coh) of the cortical activity of listeners: intrahemispheric Coh in the right hemisphere increased, while a decrease in the EEG synchronization prevailed in the left hemisphere. A focus of Coh integration, most pronounced for the γ frequencies, was formed during listening to both classical and rock music (except rock music of a low intensity). Listening to rock music of a low intensity substantially increased the probability of a decrease in intra- and interhemispheric Coh in both hemispheres, which was pronounced in all frequency bands. Listening to rock music changed interhemispheric Coh in a greater percent of cases than listening to classical music.

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