A Research of the Influence that MP3 Sound Gives EEG of the Person
Commenced in January 2007
Frequency: Monthly
Edition: International
Paper Count: 32797
A Research of the Influence that MP3 Sound Gives EEG of the Person

Authors: Seiya Teshima, Kazushige Magatani

Abstract:

Currently, many types of no-reversible compressed sound source, represented by MP3 (MPEG Audio Layer-3) are popular in the world and they are widely used to make the music file size smaller. The sound data created in this way has less information as compared to pre-compressed data. The objective of this study is by analyzing EEG to determine if people can recognize such difference as differences in sound. A measurement system that can measure and analyze EEG when a subject listens to music were experimentally developed. And ten subjects were studied with this system. In this experiment, a WAVE formatted music data and a MP3 compressed music data that is made from the WAVE formatted data were prepared. Each subject was made to hear these music sources at the same volume. From the results of this experiment, clear differences were confirmed between two wound sources.

Keywords: EEG, Biological signal , Sound , MP3

Digital Object Identifier (DOI): doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1082549

Procedia APA BibTeX Chicago EndNote Harvard JSON MLA RIS XML ISO 690 PDF Downloads 1732

References:


[1] S. N. Levine, "Audio Representations for Data Compression and Compressed Domain Processing" Ph.D. dissertation, Dept. Elect. Eng., Stanford Univ, Stanford, CA, 1998.
[2] T. Painter, A. Spanias "Perceptual coding of digital audio" in Proc. IEEE, Vol. 88, Issue 4, pp. 451-515. Apr 2000
[3] T. Oohashi, E. Nishina, M. Honda, T. Maekawa, S. Nakamura, H. Fukuyama and H. Shibasaki, "Inaudible high-frequency sounds affect brain activity, A hypersonic effect," J. Neuro-physiol, Vol. 83, pp. 3548-3558. 2000.
[4] K. Itoh, S. Suwazono, and T. Nakada, "Central auditory processing of noncontextual consonance in music: An evoked potential study," J. Acoustic Soc. Am Vol. 128, Issue 6, pp. 3781-3787.2010
[5] C. Kasprzak, Z. Damijan, and R. Panuszka, "Sound fields in biosphere of the mountain streams and their influence on the human EEG," J. Acoustic Soc. Am. Vol. 115, Issue 5, pp. 2388-2388. 2004
[6] Z. Damijan, C. Kasprzak, and R. Panuszka, "LowÔÇÉfrequency sounds and psychological tests at 7, 18, and 40 Hz" J. Acoustic Soc. Am. Vol. 115, Issue 5, pp. 2388-2388. 2004
[7] R. Yagi, E. Nishina, T. Oohashi, "A method for behavioral evaluation of the "hypersonic effect"," J. Acoustic Soc. Jpn. Vol. 24, No.4, pp. 197-200. 2003
[8] R. Yagi, E. Nishina, N. Kawai, M. Honda, T. Maekawa, S. Nakamura, M. Morimoto, K. Sanada, M. Toyoshima, T. Oohashi, "Auditory display for deep brain activation: Hyper sonic effect," International Conf. Auditory Display. 2002
[9] A. J. Blood, and R. J. Zatorre, "Intensely pleasurable responses to music correlate with activity in brain regions implicated in reward and emotion, " Proc. National Academy of Sci. USA, Vol. 98, pp. 11818-11823. 2001
[10] S. Nakamura, N. Sadato, T. Oohashi, E. Nishina, Y. Fuwamoto, Y. Yonekura, "Analysis of music-brain interaction with simultaneous measurement of regional cerebral blood flow electroencephalogram beta rhythm in human subjects, " Neurosci Lett., Vol. 275, pp222-226.1999.