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Language Experience Impacts Brain Activation for Spoken and Signed Language in Infancy: Insights From Unimodal and Bimodal Bilinguals
Beedie, Indie; Coulson-Thaker, Kimberley; Lloyd-Fox, S.. - : MIT Press - Journals, 2020
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2
Sign and speech share partially overlapping conceptual representations
Evans, S.; Gutierrez-Sigut, E.; MacSweeney, M.. - : Cell Press, 2019
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3
Distinct processing of ambiguous speech in people with non-clinical auditory verbal hallucinations
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4
What Has Replication Ever Done for Us? Insights from Neuroimaging of Speech Perception
In: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience , 11 , Article 41. (2017) (2017)
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5
What has replication ever done for us? Insights from neuroimaging of speech perception
Evans, S.. - : Frontiers, 2017
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6
How auditory experience differentially influences the function of left and right superior temporal cortices
Waters, D.; Twomey, T.; Evans, S.. - : Society for Neuroscience, 2017
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7
Distinct neural systems recruited when speech production is modulated by different masking sounds
In: JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA , 140 (1) pp. 8-19. (2016) (2016)
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8
Visual Speech Perception in Children With Language Learning Impairments
In: JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH , 59 (1) pp. 1-14. (2016) (2016)
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9
Getting the Cocktail Party Started: Masking Effects in Speech Perception.
In: J Cogn Neurosci , 28 (3) pp. 483-500. (2016) (2016)
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10
Distinct neural systems recruited when speech production is modulated by different masking sounds.
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11
Getting the Cocktail Party Started: Masking Effects in Speech Perception
Agnew, Z.K.; Evans, S.; Scott, S.K.. - : MIT Press, 2016
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12
Distinct neural systems recruited when speech production is modulated by different masking sounds
Lavan, N.; Evans, S.; Cooke, M.. - : Acoustical Society of America, 2016
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13
Visual Speech Perception in Children With Language Learning Impairments
Rosen, S.; Knowland, V.C.P.; Snell, C.. - : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, 2016
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14
Getting the cocktail party started: masking effects in speech perception
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15
Hierarchical organization of auditory and motor representations in speech perception: Evidence from searchlight similarity analysis
Evans, S.; Davis, M.H.. - : Oxford University Press, 2015
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16
Do We Know What We’re Saying? The Roles of Attention and Sensory Information During Speech Production
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17
Changes of right-hemispheric activation after constraint-induced, intensive language action therapy in chronic aphasia: fMRI evidence from auditory semantic processing.
In: Front Hum Neurosci , 8 , Article 919. (2014) (2014)
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18
Does musical enrichment enhance the neural coding of syllables? Neuroscientific interventions and the importance of behavioral data.
In: Front Hum Neurosci , 8 964 - ?. (2014) (2014)
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19
Does musical enrichment enhance the neural coding of syllables? Neuroscientific interventions and the importance of behavioral data
In: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience , 8 , Article 964. (2014) (2014)
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20
The Pathways for Intelligible Speech: Multivariate and Univariate Perspectives
In: ISSN: 1047-3211 ; Cerebral Cortex, Vol. 24, No 9 (2014) pp. 2350-61 (2014)
Abstract: An anterior pathway, concerned with extracting meaning from sound, has been identified in nonhuman primates. An analogous pathway has been suggested in humans, but controversy exists concerning the degree of lateralization and the precise location where responses to intelligible speech emerge. We have demonstrated that the left anterior superior temporal sulcus (STS) responds preferentially to intelligible speech (Scott SK, Blank CC, Rosen S, Wise RJS. 2000. Identification of a pathway for intelligible speech in the left temporal lobe. Brain. 123:2400–2406.). A functional magnetic resonance imaging study in Cerebral Cortex used equivalent stimuli and univariate and multivariate analyses to argue for the greater importance of bilateral posterior when compared with the left anterior STS in responding to intelligible speech (Okada K, Rong F, Venezia J, Matchin W, Hsieh IH, Saberi K, Serences JT,Hickok G. 2010. Hierarchical organization of human auditory cortex: evidence from acoustic invariance in the response to intelligible speech. 20: 2486–2495.). Here, we also replicate our original study, demonstrating that the left anterior STS exhibits the strongest univariate response and, in decoding using the bilateral temporal cortex, contains the most informative voxels showing an increased response to intelligible speech. In contrast, in classifications using local “searchlights” and a whole brain analysis, we find greater classification accuracy in posterior rather than anterior temporal regions. Thus, we show that the precise nature of the multivariate analysis used will emphasize different response profiles associated with complex sound to speech processing.
Keyword: fMRI; info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/616.8; intelligibility; multivariate pattern analysis; speech perception; superior temporal sulcus
URL: https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:28651
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