Literature DB >> 15734345

Listening to talking faces: motor cortical activation during speech perception.

Jeremy I Skipper1, Howard C Nusbaum, Steven L Small.   

Abstract

Neurophysiological research suggests that understanding the actions of others harnesses neural circuits that would be used to produce those actions directly. We used fMRI to examine brain areas active during language comprehension in which the speaker was seen and heard while talking (audiovisual) or heard but not seen (audio-alone) or when the speaker was seen talking with the audio track removed (video-alone). We found that audiovisual speech perception activated a network of brain regions that included cortical motor areas involved in planning and executing speech production and areas subserving proprioception related to speech production. These regions included the posterior part of the superior temporal gyrus and sulcus, the pars opercularis, premotor cortex, adjacent primary motor cortex, somatosensory cortex, and the cerebellum. Activity in premotor cortex and posterior superior temporal gyrus and sulcus was modulated by the amount of visually distinguishable phonemes in the stories. None of these regions was activated to the same extent in the audio- or video-alone conditions. These results suggest that integrating observed facial movements into the speech perception process involves a network of multimodal brain regions associated with speech production and that these areas contribute less to speech perception when only auditory signals are present. This distributed network could participate in recognition processing by interpreting visual information about mouth movements as phonetic information based on motor commands that could have generated those movements.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15734345     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2004.11.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroimage        ISSN: 1053-8119            Impact factor:   6.556


  100 in total

1.  Neural correlates of the perception of contrastive prosodic focus in French: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study.

Authors:  Marcela Perrone-Bertolotti; Marion Dohen; Hélène Lœvenbruck; Marc Sato; Cédric Pichat; Monica Baciu
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2012-04-05       Impact factor: 5.038

Review 2.  Perceptuo-motor interactions in the perceptual organization of speech: evidence from the verbal transformation effect.

Authors:  Anahita Basirat; Jean-Luc Schwartz; Marc Sato
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2012-04-05       Impact factor: 6.237

Review 3.  Some behavioral and neurobiological constraints on theories of audiovisual speech integration: a review and suggestions for new directions.

Authors:  Nicholas Altieri; David B Pisoni; James T Townsend
Journal:  Seeing Perceiving       Date:  2011-09-29

Review 4.  The cortical organization of speech processing: feedback control and predictive coding the context of a dual-stream model.

Authors:  Gregory Hickok
Journal:  J Commun Disord       Date:  2012-06-20       Impact factor: 2.288

5.  Neurophysiological origin of human brain asymmetry for speech and language.

Authors:  Benjamin Morillon; Katia Lehongre; Richard S J Frackowiak; Antoine Ducorps; Andreas Kleinschmidt; David Poeppel; Anne-Lise Giraud
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-10-18       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Audiovisual speech perception and eye gaze behavior of adults with asperger syndrome.

Authors:  Satu Saalasti; Jari Kätsyri; Kaisa Tiippana; Mari Laine-Hernandez; Lennart von Wendt; Mikko Sams
Journal:  J Autism Dev Disord       Date:  2012-08

7.  Hearing lips and seeing voices: how cortical areas supporting speech production mediate audiovisual speech perception.

Authors:  Jeremy I Skipper; Virginie van Wassenhove; Howard C Nusbaum; Steven L Small
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2007-01-11       Impact factor: 5.357

8.  Brain networks subserving the extraction of sentence information and its encoding to memory.

Authors:  Uri Hasson; Howard C Nusbaum; Steven L Small
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2007-03-19       Impact factor: 5.357

9.  Cross-modal prediction in speech depends on prior linguistic experience.

Authors:  Carolina Sánchez-García; James T Enns; Salvador Soto-Faraco
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2013-02-06       Impact factor: 1.972

Review 10.  Brain repair after stroke--a novel neurological model.

Authors:  Steven L Small; Giovanni Buccino; Ana Solodkin
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurol       Date:  2013-11-12       Impact factor: 42.937

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