The aim of the study was to find neurophysiological correlates of the primary stage impairment of speech perception, namely phonemic discrimination, in patients with sensory aphasia after acute ischemic stroke in the left hemisphere by noninvasive method of fMRI. For this purpose we registered the fMRI-equivalent of mismatch negativity (MMN) in response to the speech phonemes--syllables "ba" and "pa" in odd-ball paradigm in 20 healthy subjects and 23 patients with post-stroke sensory aphasia. In healthy subjects active brain areas depending from the MMN contrast were observed in the superior temporal and inferior frontal gyri in the right and left hemispheres. In the group of patients there was a significant activation of the auditory cortex in the right hemisphere only, and this activation was less in a volume and intensity than in healthy subjects and correlated to the degree of preservation of speech. Thus, the method of recording fMRI equivalent of MMN is sensitive to study the speech perception impairment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.7868/s0044467713030064 | DOI Listing |
J Acoust Soc Am
January 2025
Dyson School of Design Engineering, Imperial College London, SW7 2DB London, United Kingdom.
To date, there is strong evidence indicating that humans with normal hearing can adapt to non-individual head-related transfer functions (HRTFs). However, less attention has been given to studying the generalization of this adaptation to untrained conditions. This study investigated how adaptation to one set of HRTFs can generalize to another set of HRTFs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurosci
January 2025
Oregon Hearing Research Center, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA
In everyday hearing, listeners face the challenge of understanding behaviorally relevant foreground stimuli (speech, vocalizations) in complex backgrounds (environmental, mechanical noise). Prior studies have shown that high-order areas of human auditory cortex (AC) pre-attentively form an enhanced representation of foreground stimuli in the presence of background noise. This enhancement requires identifying and grouping the features that comprise the background so they can be removed from the foreground representation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Biol
January 2025
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Studies of perception have long shown that the brain adds information to its sensory analysis of the physical environment. A touchstone example for humans is language use: to comprehend a physical signal like speech, the brain must add linguistic knowledge, including syntax. Yet, syntactic rules and representations are widely assumed to be atemporal (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Speech Lang Hear Res
January 2025
Department of Special Education, Central China Normal University, Wuhan.
Purpose: This cross-sectional study explored how the speechreading ability of adults with hearing impairment (HI) in China would affect their perception of the four Mandarin Chinese lexical tones: high (Tone 1), rising (Tone 2), falling-rising (Tone 3), and falling (Tone 4). We predicted that higher speechreading ability would result in better tone performance and that accuracy would vary among individual tones.
Method: A total of 136 young adults with HI (ages 18-25 years) in China participated in the study and completed Chinese speechreading and tone awareness tests.
J Speech Lang Hear Res
January 2025
Division of Speech Pathology and Audiology, Research Institute of Audiology and Speech Pathology, College of Natural Sciences, Hallym University, Chuncheon, South Korea.
Purpose: Tools that can reliably measure changes in the perception of tinnitus following interventions are lacking. The minimum masking level, defined as the lowest level at which tinnitus is completely masked, is a candidate for quantifying changes in tinnitus perception. In this study, we aimed to determine minimal clinically important differences for minimum masking level.
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