Dopamine dysregulation in Parkinson's disease flattens the pleasurable urge to move to musical rhythms

Victor Pando‐Naude*, Tomas Edward Matthews, Andreas Højlund, Sebastian Jakobsen, Karen Østergaard, Erik Johnsen, Eduardo A. Garza‐Villarreal, Maria A. G. Witek, Virginia Penhune, Peter Vuust

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

The pleasurable urge to move to music (PLUMM) activates motor and reward areas of the brain and is thought to be driven by predictive processes. Dopamine in motor and limbic networks is implicated in beat‐based timing and music‐induced pleasure, suggesting a central role of basal ganglia (BG) dopaminergic systems in PLUMM. This study tested this hypothesis by comparing PLUMM in participants with Parkinson's disease (PD), age‐matched controls, and young controls. Participants listened to musical sequences with varying rhythmic and harmonic complexity (low, medium and high), and rated their experienced pleasure and urge to move to the rhythm. In line with previous results, healthy younger participants showed an inverted U‐shaped relationship between rhythmic complexity and ratings, with preference for medium complexity rhythms, while age‐matched controls showed a similar, but weaker, inverted U‐shaped response. Conversely, PD showed a significantly flattened response for both the urge to move and pleasure. Crucially, this flattened response could not be attributed to differences in rhythm discrimination and did not reflect an overall decrease in ratings. For harmonic complexity, PD showed a negative linear pattern for both the urge to move and pleasure while healthy age‐matched controls showed the same pattern for pleasure and an inverted U for the urge to move. This contrasts with the pattern observed in young healthy controls in previous studies, suggesting that both healthy aging and PD also influence affective responses to harmonic complexity. Together, these results support the role of dopamine within cortico‐striatal circuits in the predictive processes that form the link between the perceptual processing of rhythmic patterns and the affective and motor responses to rhythmic music.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Journal of Neuroscience
Early online date19 Sept 2023
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 19 Sept 2023

Keywords

  • predictive processes
  • rhythm
  • basal ganglia
  • music‐induced pleasure
  • dopamine
  • harmony
  • Parkinson's disease

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