Abstract Background Lateralized processing of speech is a well studied phenomenon in humans. Both anatomical and neurophysiological studies support the view that nonhuman primates and other animal species also reveal hemispheric differences in areas involved in sound processing. In recent years, an increasing number of studies on a range of taxa have employed an orienting paradigm to investigate lateralized acoustic processing. In this paradigm, sounds are played directly from behind and the direction of turn is recorded. This assay rests on the assumption that a hemispheric asymmetry in processing is coupled to an orienting bias towards the contralateral side. To examine this largely untested assumption, speech stimuli as well as artificia...
Journal article - this version is early online. Print version to follow.Much research on the lateral...
The localization of low-frequency sounds mainly relies on the processing of microsecond temporal dis...
The left hemisphere specialization for speech perception might arise from asymmetries at more basic ...
International audienceStudies on auditory laterality have revealed asymmetries for processing, parti...
Structural asymmetries in the supratemporal plane of the human brain are often cited as the anatomic...
We report evidence for a context- and not stimulus-dependent functional asymmetry in the left and ri...
We report evidence for a context- and not stimulus-dependent functional asymmetry in the left and ri...
Abstract Background Left hemispheric dominance of language processing and handedness, previously tho...
Most people are right-handed and left-cerebrally dominant for speech, leading historically to the ge...
r r Abstract: Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) were use...
There is a clearly established division of functional processing between left and right hemispheres ...
Although it is known that responses in the auditory cortex are evoked predominantly contralateral to...
All major mental functions including language, spatial and emotional processing are lateralized but ...
The question of hemispheric lateralization of neural processes is one that is pertinent to a range o...
■ The question of hemispheric lateralization of neural pro-cesses is one that is pertinent to a rang...
Journal article - this version is early online. Print version to follow.Much research on the lateral...
The localization of low-frequency sounds mainly relies on the processing of microsecond temporal dis...
The left hemisphere specialization for speech perception might arise from asymmetries at more basic ...
International audienceStudies on auditory laterality have revealed asymmetries for processing, parti...
Structural asymmetries in the supratemporal plane of the human brain are often cited as the anatomic...
We report evidence for a context- and not stimulus-dependent functional asymmetry in the left and ri...
We report evidence for a context- and not stimulus-dependent functional asymmetry in the left and ri...
Abstract Background Left hemispheric dominance of language processing and handedness, previously tho...
Most people are right-handed and left-cerebrally dominant for speech, leading historically to the ge...
r r Abstract: Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) were use...
There is a clearly established division of functional processing between left and right hemispheres ...
Although it is known that responses in the auditory cortex are evoked predominantly contralateral to...
All major mental functions including language, spatial and emotional processing are lateralized but ...
The question of hemispheric lateralization of neural processes is one that is pertinent to a range o...
■ The question of hemispheric lateralization of neural pro-cesses is one that is pertinent to a rang...
Journal article - this version is early online. Print version to follow.Much research on the lateral...
The localization of low-frequency sounds mainly relies on the processing of microsecond temporal dis...
The left hemisphere specialization for speech perception might arise from asymmetries at more basic ...