Variability in cortical representations of speech sound perception
Author:
Dana F. Boatman a
| Affiliation: | a Departments of Neurology and Otolaryngology, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA |
DOI:
10.1080/02699200701610667
Publication Frequency:
12 issues per year
Published in:
Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics,
Volume
21,
Issue
11 &
12
November
2007
, pages 901
- 907
First Published:
November
2007
Subjects:
Communication Disorders;
Rehabilitation Medicine;
Formats available:
HTML
(English)
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PDF
(English)
Also incorporating: Journal of Multilingual Communication Disorders
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Abstract
Recent brain mapping studies have provided new insights into the cortical systems that mediate human speech perception. Electrocortical stimulation mapping (ESM) is a brain mapping method that is used clinically to localize cortical functions in neurosurgical patients. Recent ESM studies have yielded new insights into the cortical systems that mediate speech perception and how these systems vary as a function of individual differences. ESM methods are described and findings from recent ESM studies of speech perception are reviewed. The clinical implications of these findings are discussed as they relate to current understanding of how individual differences in listening abilities are reflected in the underlying cortical representations.
|
| Keywords: Auditory cortex; auditory perception; statistical modelling |
| view references (24) |


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