Decision-making brain region also deciphers different phonetic sounds.Byline: ANI Washington, July 1 (ANI): A collaborative team of researchers from Brown University and the University of Cincinnati The University of Cincinnati is a coeducational public research university in Cincinnati, Ohio. Ranked as one of America’s top 25 public research universities and in the top 50 of all American research universities,[2] have found that a front portion of the brain, which handles decision-making, also helps decipher Same as decrypt. different phonetic pho·net·ic adj. 1. Of or relating to phonetics. 2. Representing the sounds of speech with a set of distinct symbols, each designating a single sound. sounds. Writing about their findings in the journal Psychological Science, the researchers have revealed that this section of the brain is called the left inferior frontal sulcus The inferior frontal sulcus is a sulcus between the middle frontal gyrus and the inferior frontal gyrus. . They say that this section treats different pronunciations of the same speech sound-such as a 'd' sound-the same way. The researchers say that in determining this, they have solved a mystery. MRI 1. (application) MRI - Magnetic Resonance Imaging. 2. MRI - Measurement Requirements and Interface. studies showed that test subjects reacted to different sounds - ta and da, for example - but appeared to recognize the same sound even when pronounced with slight variations. These five sounds are the same, but the fifth (right) has a slightly different pronunciation. "No two pronunciations of the same speech sound are exactly alike. Listeners have to figure out whether these two different pronunciations are the same speech sound such as a 'd' or two different sounds such as a 'd' sound and a 't' sound," said Emily Myers, assistant professor (research) of cognitive and linguistic sciences at Brown University. Lead researcher Sheila Blumstein, the Albert D. Mead Professor of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences at Brown, said that the findings provided a window into how the brain processes speech. "No one has shown before what areas of the brain are involved in these decisions. As human beings we spend much of our lives categorizing the world, and it appears as though we use the same brain areas for language that we use for categorizing non-language things like objects," said Blumstein. The research team studied 13 women and five men, ages 19 to 29. All were brought into an MRI scanner at Brown University's Magnetic Resonance magnetic resonance, in physics and chemistry, phenomenon produced by simultaneously applying a steady magnetic field and electromagnetic radiation (usually radio waves) to a sample of atoms and then adjusting the frequency of the radiation and the strength of the Facility, so that the researchers could measure blood flow in response to different types of stimuli. Subjects were asked to listen to repetitive syllables in a row as they lay in the scanner. The sounds were derived from recorded, synthesized speech. Initially subjects would hear identical "dah" or "tah" sounds - four in a row - which would reduce brain activity because of the repetition. The fifth sound could be the same or a different sound. The study showed that the brain signal in the left inferior frontal sulcus changed when the final sound was a different one. But if the final sound was only a different pronunciation of the same sound, the brain's response remained steady. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Myers and Blumstein, the study matters in the bid to understand language and speaking and how the brain is able to understand certain sounds and pronunciations. "What these results suggest is that [the left inferior frontal sulcus] is a shared resource Sharing a peripheral device (disk, printer, etc.) among several users. For example, a file server and laser printer in a LAN are shared resources. Contrast with shared logic. used for both language and non-language categorization," Blumbstein said. (ANI) Copyright 2009 Asian News International The Asian News International (ANI) agency provides multimedia news to China and 50 bureaus in India. It covers virtually all of South Asia since its foundation and presently claims, on its official website, to be the leading South Asia-wide news agency. (ANI) - All Rights Reserved. Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company |
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