Sounds you consciously perceive affect your brain differently than sounds you don't, a recent Yale study found.
A first-of-its-kind study from Northwestern University's School of Communication, the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Wisconsin-Madison reveals a region of the brain, long known for ...
Researchers have developed a computational framework that maps how the brain processes speech during real-world conversations ...
Johns Hopkins University researchers discovered that mice can learn new skills in fewer trials than previously assumed. Their ...
A new study published in Neuroscience sheds light on how drum and bass components influence the brain’s response to pop music ...
An area of the brain called Heschl’s gyrus — long known for handling early auditory processing — plays a far greater role in interpreting speech than previously understood. It helps interpret the ...
The cerebral cortex contains regions devoted to processing ... visual and auditory input. Now researchers led by Robert Desimone, director of MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain Research, and ...
malleus, incus and stapes), the inner ear (consisting of the cochlea and vestibular organs), the auditory nerve, the auditory cortex and other brain areas involved in sound processing.