Publication | Closed Access
Hemispheric differences in processing tone frequency and amplitude modulations
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Citations
11
References
1999
Year
MusicPsychoacousticsEngineeringNeurolinguisticsAmplitude ModulationsTone FrequencySpeech ScienceSpeech RecognitionAudio Signal ProcessingNoiseHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceAuditory ModelingTransient FrequencyMs FmsIntensity ModulationSpeech ProcessingNeuroscienceSpeech Perception
Transient frequency and amplitude modulations (FMs, AMs) of sound are requisite to speech recognition. We recorded whole-head magnetoencephalographic signals from seven subjects to binaural 620 ms 667 Hz tones, with 3, 30, or 300 ms FMs or AMs in the beginning or middle of the tone. Responses were significantly larger and earlier for FMs than AMs, for rapid than slow modulations, and for modulations at the beginning (BEG) than in the middle (MID) of the sound. BEG 3 ms FMs elicited strongest signals in the left and MID 3 ms FMs in the right hemisphere. Fast MID modulations produced significantly stronger responses in the right than left hemisphere. These differences may reflect different functions of the left and right hemisphere in speech perception.
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