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Jonas Obleser

Researcher at University of Lübeck

Publications -  222
Citations -  9426

Jonas Obleser is an academic researcher from University of Lübeck. The author has contributed to research in topics: Auditory cortex & Working memory. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 205 publications receiving 7567 citations. Previous affiliations of Jonas Obleser include University of Konstanz & Max Planck Society.

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Functional Integration across Brain Regions Improves Speech Perception under Adverse Listening Conditions

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that increasing functional connectivity between high-order cortical areas, remote from the auditory cortex, facilitates speech comprehension when the clarity of speech is reduced, regardless of predictability.
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Frequency modulation entrains slow neural oscillations and optimizes human listening behavior

TL;DR: Behavioral benefits of phase realignment in response to frequency-modulated auditory stimuli are demonstrated, overall suggesting that frequency fluctuations in natural environmental input provide a pacing signal for endogenous neural oscillations, thereby influencing perceptual processing.
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Alpha rhythms in audition : cognitive and clinical perspectives

TL;DR: The evidence presented in this article corroborates findings from other modalities, indicating that alpha-like activity functionally has an universal inhibitory role across sensory modalities.
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Neural Entrainment and Attentional Selection in the Listening Brain

TL;DR: The concept of entrainment is discussed, which offers both a putative neurophysiological mechanism for selective listening and a versatile window onto the neural basis of hearing and speech comprehension.
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Expectancy Constraints in Degraded Speech Modulate the Language Comprehension Network

TL;DR: The results show that successful decoding of speech in auditory cortex areas regulates language-specific computation (left IFG and IPC) and semantic expectancy can constrain these speech-decoding processes, with fewer neural resources being allocated to highly predictable sentences.