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1
Functional characterization of human Heschl’s gyrus in response to natural speech
In: Neuroimage (2021)
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2
Brain-informed speech separation (BISS) for enhancement of target speaker in multitalker speech perception ...
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3
Brain-informed speech separation (BISS) for enhancement of target speaker in multitalker speech perception ...
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4
Brain-informed speech separation (BISS) for enhancement of target speaker in multitalker speech perception
In: NeuroImage, 223 (2020)
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5
Brain-informed speech separation (BISS) for enhancement of target speaker in multitalker speech perception
In: Neuroimage (2020)
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6
Convergent evolution of face spaces across human face-selective neuronal groups and deep convolutional networks
In: ISSN: 2041-1723 ; Nature Communications, Vol. 10, No 1 (2019) P. 4934 (2019)
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7
Hierarchical Encoding of Attended Auditory Objects in Multi-talker Speech Perception
In: Neuron (2019)
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8
Spectrotemporal modulation provides a unifying framework for auditory cortical asymmetries
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9
Joint Representation of Spatial and Phonetic Features in the Human Core Auditory Cortex
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10
Joint Representation of Spatial and Phonetic Features in the Human Core Auditory Cortex ...
Patel, Prachi; Long, Laura Kathleen; Herrero, Jose L.. - : Columbia University, 2018
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11
Joint Representation of Spatial and Phonetic Features in the Human Core Auditory Cortex
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12
Tuning face perception with electrical stimulation of the fusiform gyrus
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13
Mechanisms Underlying Selective Neuronal Tracking of Attended Speech at a ‘Cocktail Party’
Abstract: The ability to focus on and understand one talker in a noisy social environment is a critical social-cognitive capacity, whose underlying neuronal mechanisms are unclear. We investigated the manner in which speech streams are represented in brain activity and the way that selective attention governs the brain’s representation of speech using a ‘Cocktail Party’ Paradigm, coupled with direct recordings from the cortical surface in surgical epilepsy patients. We find that brain activity dynamically tracks speech streams using both low frequency phase and high frequency amplitude fluctuations, and that optimal encoding likely combines the two. In and near low level auditory cortices, attention ‘modulates’ the representation by enhancing cortical tracking of attended speech streams, but ignored speech remains represented. In higher order regions, the representation appears to become more ‘selective,’ in that there is no detectable tracking of ignored speech. This selectivity itself seems to sharpen as a sentence unfolds.
Keyword: Article
URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23473326
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2012.12.037
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3891478
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