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The cortical organization of speech processing

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TLDR
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.
Abstract
Despite decades of research, the functional neuroanatomy of speech processing has been difficult to characterize. A major impediment to progress may have been the failure to consider task effects when mapping speech-related processing systems. We outline a dual-stream model of speech processing that remedies this situation. In this model, a ventral stream processes speech signals for comprehension, and a dorsal stream maps acoustic speech signals to frontal lobe articulatory networks. The model 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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Journal ArticleDOI

Where do you know what you know? The representation of semantic knowledge in the human brain.

TL;DR: A patient with semantic dementia — a neurodegenerative disease that is characterized by the gradual deterioration of semantic memory — was being driven through the countryside to visit a friend and was able to remind his wife where to turn along the not-recently-travelled route.
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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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Maps and streams in the auditory cortex: nonhuman primates illuminate human speech processing.

TL;DR: This paper will demonstrate how the understanding of speech perception, one important facet of language, has profited from findings and theory in nonhuman primate studies, and identify roles for different cortical areas in the perceptual processing of speech.
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Cortical oscillations and speech processing: emerging computational principles and operations.

TL;DR: It is argued that neural oscillations are foundational in speech and language processing, 'packaging' incoming information into units of the appropriate temporal granularity, and constitutes a natural model system allowing auditory research to make a unique contribution to the issue of how neural oscillatory activity affects human cognition.
Journal ArticleDOI

A cortical network for semantics: (de)constructing the N400.

TL;DR: It is shown that evidence bearing on where the N400 response is generated provides key insights into what it reflects, and this has important consequences for neural models of language comprehension.
References
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Book

The visual brain in action

TL;DR: This chapter discusses vision from a biological point of view, attention, consciousness, and the coordination of behaviour in primate visual cortex, and discusses dissociations between perception and action in normal subjects.
Journal ArticleDOI

A schema theory of discrete motor skill learning.

TL;DR: In this article, a new theory for discrete motor learning is proposed, based on the notion of the schema and uses a recall memory to produce movement and a recognition memory to evaluate response correctness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Speech recognition with primarily temporal cues.

TL;DR: Nearly perfect speech recognition was observed under conditions of greatly reduced spectral information; the presentation of a dynamic temporal pattern in only a few broad spectral regions is sufficient for the recognition of speech.
Journal ArticleDOI

The TRACE model of speech perception.

TL;DR: The TRACE model, described in detail elsewhere, deals with short segments of real speech, and suggests a mechanism for coping with the fact that the cues to the identity of phonemes vary as a function of context.
Journal ArticleDOI

The motor theory of speech perception revised

TL;DR: A motor theory of speech perception, initially proposed to account for results of early experiments with synthetic speech, is now extensively revised to accommodate recent findings, and to relate the assumptions of the theory to those that might be made about other perceptual modes.
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