Literature DB >> 17004947

Neural responses to silent lipreading in normal hearing male and female subjects.

Liesbet Ruytjens1, Frans Albers, Pim van Dijk, Hero Wit, Antoon Willemsen.   

Abstract

In the past, researchers investigated silent lipreading in normal hearing subjects with functional neuroimaging tools and showed how the brain processes visual stimuli that are normally accompanied by an auditory counterpart. Previously, we showed activation differences between males and females in primary auditory cortex during silent lipreading, i.e. only the female group significantly activated the primary auditory region during lipreading. Here we report and discuss the overall activation pattern in males and females. We used positron emission tomography to study silent lipreading in 19 normal hearing subjects (nine females). Prior to scanning, subjects were tested on their lipreading ability and only good lipreaders were included in the study. Silent lipreading was compared with a static image. In the whole group, activations were found mainly in the left hemisphere with major clusters in superior temporal, inferior parietal, inferior frontal and precentral regions. The female group showed more clusters and these clusters were larger than in the male group. Sex differences were found mainly in right inferior frontal and left inferior parietal regions and to a lesser extent in bilateral angular and precentral gyri. The sex differences in the parietal multimodal region support our previous hypothesis that the male and female brain process visual speech stimuli differently without differences in overt lipreading ability. Specifically, females associate the visual speech image with the corresponding auditory speech sound whereas males focus more on the visual image itself.

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 17004947     DOI: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2006.05072.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Neurosci        ISSN: 0953-816X            Impact factor:   3.386


  7 in total

1.  The perception of visible speech: estimation of speech rate and detection of time reversals.

Authors:  Paolo Viviani; Francesca Figliozzi; Francesco Lacquaniti
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2011-10-11       Impact factor: 1.972

2.  Neural correlates of interindividual differences in children's audiovisual speech perception.

Authors:  Audrey R Nath; Eswen E Fava; Michael S Beauchamp
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2011-09-28       Impact factor: 6.167

3.  Response Errors in Females' and Males' Sentence Lipreading Necessitate Structurally Different Models for Predicting Lipreading Accuracy.

Authors:  Lynne E Bernstein
Journal:  Lang Learn       Date:  2018-02-26

4.  Learning strategy refinement reverses early sensory cortical map expansion but not behavior: Support for a theory of directed cortical substrates of learning and memory.

Authors:  Gabriel A Elias; Kasia M Bieszczad; Norman M Weinberger
Journal:  Neurobiol Learn Mem       Date:  2015-10-24       Impact factor: 2.877

5.  Functional sex differences in human primary auditory cortex.

Authors:  Liesbet Ruytjens; Janniko R Georgiadis; Gert Holstege; Hero P Wit; Frans W J Albers; Antoon T M Willemsen
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2007-08-17       Impact factor: 9.236

6.  Cortical circuits for silent speechreading in deaf and hearing people.

Authors:  Cheryl M Capek; Mairéad Macsweeney; Bencie Woll; Dafydd Waters; Philip K McGuire; Anthony S David; Michael J Brammer; Ruth Campbell
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2007-12-05       Impact factor: 3.139

7.  Do gender differences in audio-visual benefit and visual influence in audio-visual speech perception emerge with age?

Authors:  Magnus Alm; Dawn Behne
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2015-07-16
  7 in total

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