Title of article
Cortical integration of audio–visual speech and non-speech stimuli
Author/Authors
Wyk، نويسنده , , Brent C. Vander and Ramsay، نويسنده , , Gordon J. and Hudac، نويسنده , , Caitlin M. and Jones، نويسنده , , Warren and Lin، نويسنده , , David and Klin، نويسنده , , Ami and Lee، نويسنده , , Su Mei and Pelphrey، نويسنده , , Kevin A.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
10
From page
97
To page
106
Abstract
Using fMRI we investigated the neural basis of audio–visual processing of speech and non-speech stimuli using physically similar auditory stimuli (speech and sinusoidal tones) and visual stimuli (animated circles and ellipses). Relative to uni-modal stimuli, the different multi-modal stimuli showed increased activation in largely non-overlapping areas. Ellipse-Speech, which most resembles naturalistic audio–visual speech, showed higher activation in the right inferior frontal gyrus, fusiform gyri, left posterior superior temporal sulcus, and lateral occipital cortex. Circle-Tone, an arbitrary audio–visual pairing with no speech association, activated middle temporal gyri and lateral occipital cortex. Circle-Speech showed activation in lateral occipital cortex, and Ellipse-Tone did not show increased activation relative to uni-modal stimuli. Further analysis revealed that middle temporal regions, although identified as multi-modal only in the Circle-Tone condition, were more strongly active to Ellipse-Speech or Circle-Speech, but regions that were identified as multi-modal for Ellipse-Speech were always strongest for Ellipse-Speech. Our results suggest that combinations of auditory and visual stimuli may together be processed by different cortical networks, depending on the extent to which multi-modal speech or non-speech percepts are evoked.
Keywords
Audio–visual , Multi-modal processing , FMRI , Speech
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Record number
2250256
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