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Functional magnetic resonance imaging of human auditory cortex

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TLDR
The utility of magnetic resonance imaging in the study of human brain structure‐function relationships is confirmed and the role of the superior temporal gyrus in perception of acoustic‐phonetic features of speech, rather than processing of semantic features is emphasized.
Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging methods recently demonstrated regional cerebral signal changes in response to limb movement and visual stimulation, attributed to blood flow enhancement We studied 5 normal subjects scanned while listening to auditory stimuli including nonspeech noise, meaningless speech sounds, single words, and narrative text Imaged regions included the lateral aspects of both hemispheres Signal changes in the superior temporal gyrus and superior temporal sulcus were observed bilaterally in all subjects Speech stimuli were associated with significantly more widespread signal changes than was the noise stimulus, while no consistent differences were observed between responses to different speech stimuli Considerable intersubject variability in the topography of signal changes was observed These observations confirm the utility of magnetic resonance imaging in the study of human brain structure-function relationships and emphasize the role of the superior temporal gyrus in perception of acoustic-phonetic features of speech, rather than processing of semantic features

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The cortical organization of speech processing

TL;DR: A dual-stream model of speech processing is outlined that assumes that the ventral stream is largely bilaterally organized — although there are important computational differences between the left- and right-hemisphere systems — and that the dorsal stream is strongly left- Hemisphere dominant.
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Imaging Cognition II: An Empirical Review of 275 PET and fMRI Studies

TL;DR: Analysis of regional activations across cognitive domains suggested that several brain regions, including the cerebellum, are engaged by a variety of cognitive challenges.
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A review and synthesis of the first 20 years of PET and fMRI studies of heard speech, spoken language and reading

TL;DR: An anatomical model is presented that indicates the location of the language areas and the most consistent functions that have been assigned to them and the implications for cognitive models of language processing are considered.
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The spatial and temporal signatures of word production components.

TL;DR: A comparison of the word production results with studies on auditory word/non-word perception and reading showed that the time course of activations in word production is compatible with the temporal constraints that perception processes impose on the production processes they affect in picture/word interference paradigms.
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Human Brain Language Areas Identified by Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging

TL;DR: Although partly in conflict with the classical model of language localization, FMRI findings are generally compatible with reported lesion data and provide additional support for ongoing efforts to refine and extend the classicalmodel.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The assessment and analysis of handedness: The Edinburgh inventory

TL;DR: An inventory of 20 items with a set of instructions and response- and computational-conventions is proposed and the results obtained from a young adult population numbering some 1100 individuals are reported.
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Dynamic magnetic resonance imaging of human brain activity during primary sensory stimulation.

TL;DR: In this paper, a series of images were acquired continuously with the same imaging pulse sequence (either gradient echo or spin-echo inversion recovery) during task activation, and a significant increase in signal intensity (paired t test; P less than 0.001) of 1.8% +/- 0.9% was observed in the primary visual cortex (V1) of seven normal volunteers.
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Intrinsic signal changes accompanying sensory stimulation: functional brain mapping with magnetic resonance imaging

TL;DR: It is reported that visual stimulation produces an easily detectable (5-20%) transient increase in the intensity of water proton magnetic resonance signals in human primary visual cortex in gradient echo images at 4-T magnetic-field strength.
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