PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

NYU researchers ID part of the brain for processing speech

2015-05-18
(Press-News.org) A team of New York University neuroscientists has identified a part of the brain exclusively devoted to processing speech. Its findings point to the superior temporal sulcus (STS), located in the temporal lobe, and help settle a long-standing debate about role-specific neurological functions.

"We now know there is at least one part of the brain that specializes in the processing of speech and doesn't have a role in handling other sounds," explains David Poeppel, the paper's senior author, a professor in NYU's Department of Psychology and Center for Neural Science.

The study, which appears in the journal Nature Neuroscience, sought to address a decades-old uncertainty--and dispute--in neural science: are there certain regions of the brain exclusively dedicated to managing speech, thereby ignoring other sounds, such as music or animal noises?

To address this question, the researchers conducted a series of experiments in which the study's subjects listened to speech as well as to other types of "environmental" sounds that ranged from fireworks to ping pong to dogs barking.

To ensure that the subjects were responding to speech sounds rather than to a language that was already familiar to them, the researchers used recorded German-language words--which none of the subjects understood--rather than English ones. In this way, the method aimed to solely measure the brain's detection of speech, which involves listening and speaking, rather than language, which involves constructing and understanding sentences.

To further disguise the origins of both the speech and environmental sounds, the researchers developed a series of audio "quilts"--sound segments, ranging from 30 to 900 milliseconds, in which words or natural sounds were chopped up and reordered. With this method, the researchers could help ensure that the study's subjects were responding only to audio cues rather than guessing their origins--and thus possibly activating parts of the brain not relevant to sound detection.

During these procedures, the researchers gauged subjects' neurological responses--in multiple parts of the brain--using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).

The results showed expected activity in response to all types of sounds in the temporal lobe's auditory cortex. However, moving further down in this region--to the STS--the results showed activity only in detecting speech sounds, suggesting that this part of the brain is reserved for spotting the spoken word.

INFORMATION:

The study's other co-authors included Tobias Overath, Josh H McDermott, and Jean Mary Zarate--all NYU post-doctoral fellows at the time of the study.

This work was supported, in part, by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (2R01DC05660).



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study: Many people in emergency department for chest pain don't to be need admitted

2015-05-18
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Chest pain is a scary symptom that sends more than 7 million Americans to the emergency department each year. About half of them are admitted to the hospital for further observation, testing or treatment. Now, emergency medicine physicians at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and Mount Carmel Health System believe that number can be significantly reduced. Their study, published in today's JAMA Internal Medicine, finds a very low short-term risk for life-threatening cardiac events among patients with chest pain who have normal cardiac blood ...

Microchip captures clusters of circulating tumor cells -- NIH study

Microchip captures clusters of circulating tumor cells -- NIH study
2015-05-18
Researchers have developed a microfluidic chip that can capture rare clusters of circulating tumor cells, which could yield important new insights into how cancer spreads. The work was funded by the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB), part of the National Institutes of Health. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are cells that break away from a tumor and move through a cancer patient's bloodstream. Single CTCs are extremely rare, typically fewer than 1 in 1 billion cells. These cells can take up residence in distant organs, and researchers ...

US West's power grid must be prepared for impacts of climate change

2015-05-18
TEMPE, Arizona -- Electricity generation and distribution infrastructure in the Western United States must be "climate-proofed" to diminish the risk of future power shortages, according to research by two Arizona State University engineers. Expected increases in extreme heat and drought events will bring changes in precipitation, air and water temperatures, air density and humidity, write Matthew Bartos and Mikhail Chester in the current issue of the research journal Nature Climate Change. The authors say the changing conditions could significantly constrain the energy ...

Suicide trends in school-aged children reveal racial disparity

2015-05-18
Suicide is a leading cause of death among children younger than 12 years. Suicide rates in this age group have remained steady overall for the past 20 years, but a study published today in JAMA Pediatrics from The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital is the first national study to observe higher suicide rates among black children compared to white children. "Little is known about the epidemiology of suicide in this age group," said Jeff Bridge, PhD, lead researcher of the study and principal investigator at the Center for Innovation in Pediatric Practice ...

UCSF-led study explains how early childhood vaccination reduces leukemia risk

2015-05-18
A team led by UCSF researchers has discovered how a commonly administered vaccine protects against acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), the most common type of childhood cancer. The Haemophilus influenzae Type b (Hib) vaccine not only prevents ear infections and meningitis caused by the Hib bacterium, but also protects against ALL, which accounts for approximately 25 percent of cancer diagnoses among children younger than 15 years, according to the National Cancer Society. The Hib vaccine is part of the standard vaccination schedule recommended by the Centers for Disease ...

Researchers make progress engineering digestive system tissues

2015-05-18
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - May 18, 2015 - New proof-of-concept research at Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine suggests the potential for engineering replacement intestine tissue in the lab, a treatment that could be applied to infants born with a short bowel and adults having large pieces of gut removed due to cancer or inflammatory bowel disease. Lead researcher Khalil N Bitar, Ph.D., a professor at the institute, which is part of Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, reported the results this week at Digestive Diseases Week in Washington, D.C. He also updated ...

Novel insights in MET-proto-oncogene might lead to optimizing cancer treatment

2015-05-18
The MET-proto-oncogene is involved in the pathogenesis of several tumors and therefore represents an interesting target for future therapies currently tested in dozens of clinical trials. Veronica Finisguerra, Andrea Casazza, Max Mazzone and colleagues from VIB, KU Leuven and UZ Leuven now reveal that MET is needed for the recruitment of anti-tumoral neutrophils and puts a mechanism into action that promotes the killing of cancer cells. This means that the efficacy of a cancer therapy targeting MET in cancer cells will partly be countered by the pro-tumoral effect arising ...

Beyond the poppy: A new method of opium production

2015-05-18
Moonshiners and home-brewers have long used yeast to convert sugar into alcohol. New research shows that those methods could also be adapted for something with more significant ramifications: the production of drugs including opiates, antibiotics, and anti-cancer therapeutics. According to new studies by researchers from Concordia University in Montreal and the University of California, Berkeley, yeast can be engineered to convert sugar to alkaloids -- plant-derived compounds such as codeine and morphine, naturally produced in the opium poppy. Collaborating on synthesis ...

Study highlights ways to boost weather and climate predictions

2015-05-18
Long range weather forecasts and climate change projections could be significantly boosted by advances in our understanding of the relationship between layers of the Earth's atmosphere -- the stratosphere and troposphere. A team of UK scientists have studied how a circulation changes in the stratosphere (above 10 km) can influence both weather and climate conditions on the surface of the Earth. The experts, who include Professor Mark Baldwin from the University of Exeter, argue that the predictability and persistence of stratospheric events could help scientists enhance ...

Men with asthma less likely to develop lethal prostate cancer

2015-05-18
In what they are calling a surprising finding in a large study of men who completed questionnaires and allowed scientists to review their medical records, Johns Hopkins researchers report that men with a history of asthma were less likely than those without it to develop lethal prostate cancer. In their analysis of data collected from 47,880 men and described online Feb. 27 in the International Journal of Cancer, the scientists found that men with a history of asthma were 29 percent less likely to have been diagnosed with prostate cancer that spread or to have died of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Earthquake caught on camera

How a decaploid plant evolved to fight disease with powerful compounds

Where did RNA come from?

Health: Anti-obesity medications associated with weight rebound post-treatment

“Forever chemicals” linked to higher risk of type 2 diabetes

Near tripling in US reported lidocaine local anesthetic poisonings/deaths over past decade

Despite self-perceived sensitivities, study finds gluten and wheat safe for many people with IBS

New subtype of diabetes identified in Africa in first largescale study

A new diabetes subtype identified in Sub-Saharan Africa and Black Americans, study finds

A simple filter for rare earth elements will ensure a clean domestic supply of these crucial metals

UCF researchers developing new methods to passively mitigate lunar dust for space exploration

Discovering new materials: AI can simulate billions of atoms simultaneously

University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center becomes first in the United States to implement Akesis Inc. innovative Galaxy RTI device for patient treatment

FAMU-FSU research identifies U.S. dams at greatest risk of overtopping

‘Weekend warriors’ with diabetes have a 33% lower risk of cardiovascular mortality

Study identifies world-first treatments to prevent a life-threatening virus infection

Solvent selection tool boosts thermoelectric devices

Collecting large-scale data from impoverished communities

Neuroanatomy of social dominance

Reference genomes for rice’s wild relatives may boost future crops

How AI can enhance early detection of emerging viruses: UNLV study

Surface structure engineering of PtCu clusters enhances the performance of propane dehydrogenation

Gemini North discovers long-predicted stellar companion of Betelgeuse

Hollow molecules offer sustainable hydrocarbon separation

High-performance near-Infrared computational spectrometer enabled by finely-tuned PbS quantum dots

Hyaluronidase nanogel-armed CAR-T cell for improving efficacy against solid tumors

Tailored hard/soft magnetic heterostructure anchored on 2D carbon nanosheet for efficient microwave absorption and anti-corrosion property

A novel strategy for modulating the crystalline-amorphous composites and electronic structure to enhance hydrogen evolution reaction

Metal-free catalysts break through in green H2O2 synthesis! Novel organic semiconductors enable high-efficiency interfacial reactions

Do these two cancer drugs have what it takes to beat Alzheimer’s?

[Press-News.org] NYU researchers ID part of the brain for processing speech