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Subcortical differentiation of stop consonants relates to reading and speech-in-noise perception
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Brainstem transcription of speech is disrupted in children with autism spectrum disorders
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The scalp-recorded brainstem response to speech: Neural origins and plasticity
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Abnormal cortical processing of the syllable rate of speech in poor readers
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Right-hemisphere auditory cortex is dominant for coding syllable patterns in speech
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Plasticity in the adult human auditory brainstem following short-term linguistic training
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Musical experience shapes human brainstem encoding of linguistic pitch patterns
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Seeing speech affects acoustic information processing in the human brainstem
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Abstract:
Afferent auditory processing in the human brainstem is generally assumed to be determined by acoustic stimulus features and immune to stimulation by other senses or cognitive factors. In contrast, we show that lipreading during speech perception influences acoustic processing astonishingly early. Event-related brainstem potentials were recorded from 10 healthy adults to concordant (acoustic-visual match), conflicting (acoustic-visual mismatch) and unimodal stimuli. Audiovisual interactions occurred around 11ms post-stimulation and persisted for the first 30ms of the response. Furthermore, response timing and magnitude depended on audiovisual pairings. These findings indicate that early auditory processing is more plastic than previously thought.
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Keyword:
Article
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-005-0071-5 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16217645 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2535928
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