& We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to study the neural processing of vowels whose perception depends on the continuity illusion. Participants heard sequences of two-formant vowels under a number of listening conditions. In the ‘‘vowel conditions,’ ’ both formants were always present simultaneously and the stimuli were perceived as speech-like. Contrasted with a range of nonspeech sounds, these vowels elicited activity in the posterior middle temporal gyrus (MTG) and superior temporal sulcus (STS). When the two formants alternated in time, the ‘‘speech-likeness’ ’ of the sounds was reduced. It could be partially restored by filling the silent gaps in each formant with bands of noise (the ‘‘Illusion’ ’ condition) because the ...