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Sensory–motor transformations for speech occur bilaterally

Author

Listed:
  • Gregory B. Cogan

    (Center for Neural Science, New York University)

  • Thomas Thesen

    (New York University School of Medicine)

  • Chad Carlson

    (New York University School of Medicine
    Present address: Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53226, USA.)

  • Werner Doyle

    (New York University School of Medicine)

  • Orrin Devinsky

    (New York University School of Medicine
    New York University School of Medicine)

  • Bijan Pesaran

    (Center for Neural Science, New York University)

Abstract

Direct neural recordings from electrodes over bilateral cortices show that sensory–motor transformations for speech occur bilaterally; neural responses are robust during both perception and production in an overt word-repetition task, and bilateral sensory–motor responses can perform transformations between speech-perception and speech-production representations during a non-word transformation task.

Suggested Citation

  • Gregory B. Cogan & Thomas Thesen & Chad Carlson & Werner Doyle & Orrin Devinsky & Bijan Pesaran, 2014. "Sensory–motor transformations for speech occur bilaterally," Nature, Nature, vol. 507(7490), pages 94-98, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:507:y:2014:i:7490:d:10.1038_nature12935
    DOI: 10.1038/nature12935
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