Neuropsychological studies have suggested that imagery processes may be mediated by neuronal mechanisms similar to those used in perception. To test this hypothesis, and to explore the neural basis for song imagery, 12 normal subjects were scanned using the water bolus method to measure cerebral blood flow (CBF) during the performance of three tasks. In the control condition subjects saw pairs of words on each trial and judged which word was longer. In the perceptual condition subjects also viewed pairs of words, this time drawn from a familiar song; simultaneously they heard the corresponding song, and their task was to judge the change in pitch of the two cued words within the song. In the imagery condition, subjects performed precisely t...
Humans can mentally represent auditory information without an external stimulus, but the specificity...
Four experiments examined how people operate on memory representations of familiar songs. The tasks ...
Auditory imagery is more than just mental “replaying” of tunes in one’s head. I will review several ...
We used fMRI to investigate the neuronal correlates of encoding and recognizing heard and imagined m...
Musical imagery refers to the experience of replaying music by imagining it inside the head. Where...
Humans can mentally represent auditory information without an external stimulus, but the specificity...
Humans can generate mental auditory images of voices or songs, sometimes perceiving them almost as v...
Most people intuitively understand what it means to “hear a tune in your head.” Converging evidence ...
Humans can generate mental auditory images of voices or songs, sometimes perceiving them almost as v...
Humans can generate mental auditory images of voices or songs, sometimes perceiving them almost as v...
The neural correlates of music perception were studied by measuring cerebral blood flow (CBF) change...
Two fMRI experiments explored the neural substrates of a musical imagery task that required manipula...
The generality of findings implicating secondary auditory areas in auditory imagery was tested by us...
Humans can generate mental auditory images of voices or songs, sometimes perceiving them almost as v...
The present study used positron emission tomography (PET) to examine the cerebral activity pattern a...
Humans can mentally represent auditory information without an external stimulus, but the specificity...
Four experiments examined how people operate on memory representations of familiar songs. The tasks ...
Auditory imagery is more than just mental “replaying” of tunes in one’s head. I will review several ...
We used fMRI to investigate the neuronal correlates of encoding and recognizing heard and imagined m...
Musical imagery refers to the experience of replaying music by imagining it inside the head. Where...
Humans can mentally represent auditory information without an external stimulus, but the specificity...
Humans can generate mental auditory images of voices or songs, sometimes perceiving them almost as v...
Most people intuitively understand what it means to “hear a tune in your head.” Converging evidence ...
Humans can generate mental auditory images of voices or songs, sometimes perceiving them almost as v...
Humans can generate mental auditory images of voices or songs, sometimes perceiving them almost as v...
The neural correlates of music perception were studied by measuring cerebral blood flow (CBF) change...
Two fMRI experiments explored the neural substrates of a musical imagery task that required manipula...
The generality of findings implicating secondary auditory areas in auditory imagery was tested by us...
Humans can generate mental auditory images of voices or songs, sometimes perceiving them almost as v...
The present study used positron emission tomography (PET) to examine the cerebral activity pattern a...
Humans can mentally represent auditory information without an external stimulus, but the specificity...
Four experiments examined how people operate on memory representations of familiar songs. The tasks ...
Auditory imagery is more than just mental “replaying” of tunes in one’s head. I will review several ...