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1
You talkin' to me? Communicative talker gaze activates left-lateralized superior temporal cortex during perception of degraded speech.
In: Neuropsychologia (2017) (2017)
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2
Do sentences with unaccusative verbs involve syntactic movement? Evidence from neuroimaging
In: Language, Cognition and Neuroscience , 29 (9) pp. 1035-1045. (2014) (2014)
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3
Discriminating between Auditory and Motor Cortical Responses to Speech and Nonspeech Mouth Sounds
In: J COGNITIVE NEUROSCI , 23 (12) 4038 - 4047. (2011) (2011)
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4
Neural Correlates of Sublexical Processing in Phonological Working Memory
In: J COGNITIVE NEUROSCI , 23 (4) 961 - 977. (2011) (2011)
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5
Inferior Frontal Gyrus Activation Predicts Individual Differences in Perceptual Learning of Cochlear-Implant Simulations
In: J NEUROSCI , 30 (21) 7179 - 7186. (2010) (2010)
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6
Disentangling Syntax and Intelligibility in Auditory Language Comprehension
In: HUM BRAIN MAPP , 31 (3) 448 - 457. (2010) (2010)
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7
The Effect of Delayed Auditory Feedback on Activity in the Temporal Lobe While Speaking: A Positron Emission Tomography Study
In: J SPEECH LANG HEAR R , 53 (2) 226 - 236. (2010) (2010)
Abstract: Purpose: Delayed auditory feedback is a technique that can improve fluency in stutterers, while disrupting fluency in many nonstuttering individuals. The aim of this study was to determine the neural basis for the detection of and compensation for such a delay, and the effects of increases in the delay duration.Method: Positron emission tomography was used to image regional cerebral blood flow changes, an index of neural activity, and to assess the influence of increasing amounts of delay.Results: Delayed auditory feedback led to increased activation in the bilateral superior temporal lobes, extending into posterior-medial auditory areas. Similar peaks in the temporal lobe were sensitive to increases in the amount of delay. A single peak in the temporal parietal junction responded to the amount of delay but not to the presence of a delay (relative to no delay).Conclusions: This study permitted distinctions to be made between the neural response to hearing one's voice at a delay and the neural activity that correlates with this delay. Notably, all the peaks showed some influence of the amount of delay. This result confirms a role for the posterior, sensorimotor "how" system in the production of speech under conditions of delayed auditory feedback.
Keyword: AREA; CORTEX; delayed auditory information; FLUENCY-EVOKING CONDITIONS; FMRI; MOTOR INTERACTION; PERCEPTION; PLANE; positron emission tomography; SPEAKERS; speech production; STUTTERERS
URL: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/174810/
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8
Functional integration across brain regions improves speech perception under adverse listening conditions
In: J NEUROSCI , 27 (9) 2283 - 2289. (2007) (2007)
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9
Positive emotions preferentially engage an auditory-motor "mirror" system
In: J NEUROSCI , 26 (50) 13067 - 13075. (2006) (2006)
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10
Neural correlates of intelligibility in speech investigated with noise vocoded speech- A positron emission tomography study
In: J ACOUST SOC AM , 120 (2) 1075 - 1083. (2006) (2006)
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11
Now you hear it, now you don't: Transient traces of consonants and their nonspeech analogues in the human brain
In: CEREB CORTEX , 16 (8) 1069 - 1076. (2006) (2006)
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12
Auditory processing - speech, space and auditory objects
In: CURR OPIN NEUROBIOL , 15 (2) 197 - 201. (2005) (2005)
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13
The neurobiology of speech perception
In: In: Cutler, A, (ed.) UNSPECIFIED (pp. 141-156). LAWRENCE ERLBAUM ASSOC PUBL (2005) (2005)
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14
A positron emission tomography study of the neural basis of informational and energetic masking effects in speech perception
In: J ACOUST SOC AM , 115 (2) 813 - 821. (2004) (2004)
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15
Going beyond the information given: a neural system supporting semantic interpretation
In: NEUROIMAGE , 19 (3) 870 - 876. (2003) (2003)
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