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

How does stroke influence speech comprehension?

People with a stroke-related language disorder have key differences in brain activity compared to healthy controls that may explain their impaired verbal speech processing

2025-12-29
(Press-News.org) Following stroke, some people experience a language disorder that hinders their ability to process speech sounds. How do their brains change from stroke? Researchers led by Laura Gwilliams, faculty scholar at the Wu Tsai Neuroscience Institute and Stanford Data Science and assistant professor at the Stanford School of Humanities and Sciences, and Maaike Vandermosten, associate professor at the Department of Neurosciences at KU Leuven, compared the brains of 39 patients following stroke and 24 healthy age-matched controls to unveil language processing brain mechanisms.  

As reported in their JNeurosci paper, the researchers recorded brain activity while volunteers listened to a story. People with verbal speech processing issues from stroke were not slower to process speech sounds but had much weaker processing than healthy participants. According to the researchers, this suggests that people with this language disorder can hear sounds of all kinds as well as healthy people but have issues integrating speech sounds to understand language. 

Additionally, when there was uncertainty about what words were being said, healthy people processed speech sound features longer compared to those who had experienced a stroke. This could mean that, following stroke, people do not process speech sounds long enough to successfully comprehend words that are difficult to detect. 

This work points to brain activity patterns that may be crucial for understanding verbal language, according to the authors. First author Jill Kries expresses excitement about continuing to explore how this simple approach—listening to a story—can be used to improve diagnostics for conditions characterized by language processing issues, which currently involve hours of behavioral tasks. 

### 

Please contact media@sfn.org for full-text PDF. 

About JNeurosci 

JNeurosci was launched in 1981 as a means to communicate the findings of the highest quality neuroscience research to the growing field. Today, the journal remains committed to publishing cutting-edge neuroscience that will have an immediate and lasting scientific impact, while responding to authors' changing publishing needs, representing breadth of the field and diversity in authorship. 

About The Society for Neuroscience 

The Society for Neuroscience is the world's largest organization of scientists and physicians devoted to understanding the brain and nervous system. The nonprofit organization, founded in 1969, now has nearly 35,000 members in more than 95 countries. 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

B cells transiently unlock their plasticity, risking lymphoma development

2025-12-29
Immune cells called B cells make antibodies that fight off invading bacteria, viruses and other foreign substances. During their preparation for this battle, B cells transiently revert to a more flexible, or plastic, stem-cell-like state in the lymph nodes, according to a new preclinical study from Weill Cornell Medicine investigators. The results could help explain how many lymphomas develop from mature B cells rather than from stem cells, as many other cancers do, and guide researchers in developing better treatments. The study, published Dec. 29 in Nature Cell Biology, reveals a paradox: as mature B cells get prepped to make antibodies, a highly specialized ...

Advanced AI dodel predicts spoken language outcomes in deaf children after cochlear implants

2025-12-29
AI model using deep transfer learning – the most advanced form of machine learning – predicted with 92% accuracy spoken language outcomes at one-to-three years after cochlear implants (implanted electronic hearing device), according to a large international study published in JAMA Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery. Although cochlear implantation is the only effective treatment to improve hearing and enable spoken language for children with severe to profound hearing loss, spoken language development after early implantation is more variable in comparison to children born with typical hearing. If children who are likely to have more ...

Multimodal imaging-based cerebral blood flow prediction model development in simulated microgravity

2025-12-29
“Maintaining adequate CBF is crucial for astronauts’ cognitive function during long-duration microgravity, but real-time monitoring in space is constrained by MRI’s complexity and payload limits,” explained study corresponding author Lijun Yuan from Air Force Medical University. The core innovations include (a) using −6° head-down tilt bed rest (HDTBR) to simulate microgravity, (b) integrating carotid ultrasound and brain MRI data to establish ML-based CBF prediction models, and (c) developing an interpretable web application for in-orbit ...

Accelerated streaming subgraph matching framework is faster, more robust, and scalable

2025-12-29
Graphs are widely used to represent complex relationships in everyday applications such as social networks, bioinformatics, and recommendation systems, where they model how people or things (nodes) are connected through interactions (edges). Subgraph matching—the task of finding a smaller pattern, or query subgraph, within a larger graph—is crucial for detecting fraud, recognizing patterns, and performing semantic searches. However, current research on streaming subgraph, a similar task where timing is important, matching faces major challenges in scalability and latency, including difficulties in handling large graphs, low cache efficiency, limited query result reuse, and ...

Gestational diabetes rose every year in the US since 2016

2025-12-29
Gestational diabetes raises health risks for both mother and baby From 2016 to 2024, rates rose in every racial and ethnic group Highest rates seen in American Indian/Alaska Native, Asian and Pacific Islander women CHICAGO --- Gestational diabetes rose every single year in the U.S. from 2016 through 2024, according to a new Northwestern Medicine analysis of more than 12 million U.S. births. The condition, which raises health risks for both mother and baby, shot up 36% over the nine-year period (from 58 to 79 cases per 1,000 births) and increased across every racial and ethnic group. “Gestational diabetes ...

OHSU researchers find breast cancer drug boosts leukemia treatment

2025-12-29
A research team at Oregon Health & Science University has discovered a promising new drug combination that may help people with acute myeloid leukemia overcome resistance to one of the most common frontline therapies. In a study published today in Cell Reports Medicine, researchers analyzed more than 300 acute myeloid leukemia, or AML, patient samples and found that pairing venetoclax, a standard AML drug, with palbociclib, a cell-cycle inhibitor currently approved for breast cancer, produced significantly stronger and more durable ...

Fear and medical misinformation regarding risk of progression or recurrence among patients with breast cancer

2025-12-29
About The Study: In this survey study of patients with breast cancer, exposure to medical misinformation was common, underscoring the need for better survivorship communication with patients; fear of recurrence was not associated with exposure to misinformation. Further research on how patients process medical misinformation is essential, especially in populations at highest risk for misinformation spread. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Kaitlyn Lapen, MD, email lapenk@mskcc.org. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.49809) Editor’s ...

Glucagonlike peptide-1 receptor agonists and asthma risk in adolescents with obesity

2025-12-29
About The Study: This study found an association between glucagonlike peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA) use and a lower risk of acute asthma exacerbations in adolescents with overweight or obesity. The findings suggest a potential dual benefit for this population, where a single class of medication could address both weight management and lower risk for asthma exacerbation, thereby potentially reducing the burden of 2 common and interconnected chronic conditions. Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding ...

Reviving dormant immunity: Millimeter waves reprogram the immunosuppressive microenvironment to potentiate immunotherapy without obvious side effects

2025-12-29
MMWs, a form of non-ionizing, non-thermal electromagnetic radiation, have emerged as a promising solution. Operating at a frequency of 35 GHz with an energy density of ≤10 mW/cm², MMWs do not raise tissue temperatures or cause cellular damage. Instead, they interact with biological macromolecules (e.g., proteins, DNA) through resonance absorption, inducing conformational changes that modulate their function. In preclinical studies using 4T1 breast cancer and CT26 colorectal cancer models—both classic "cold tumors"—researchers found that MMW irradiation alone inhibited ...

Safety decision-making for autonomous vehicles integrating passenger physiological states by fNIRS

2025-12-29
In recent years, several serious traffic accidents have exposed the shortcomings of current autonomous driving systems in making safe decisions. Traditional decision-making methods, due to functional deficiencies or machine performance limitations, struggle to address potential risky behaviors, leading to a continued need for human intervention in complex driving scenarios. To address this, researchers have begun exploring the use of human physiological states as an information source to improve the safety decision-making of autonomous vehicles. “Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS), as a non-invasive real-time brain activity monitoring method, can provide cognitive ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Research alert: Spreading drug costs over the year may ease financial burden for Medicare cancer patients

Hospital partnership improves follow up scans, decreases long term risk after aortic repair

Layered hydrogen silicane for safe, lightweight, and energy-efficient hydrogen carrier

Observing positronium beam as a quantum matter wave for the first time

IEEE study investigates the effects of pointing error on quantum key distribution systems

Analyzing submerged fault structures to predict future earthquakes in Türkiye

Quantum ‘alchemy’ made feasible with excitons

‘Revoice’ device gives stroke patients their voice back

USF-led study: AI helps reveal global surge in floating algae

New method predicts asthma attacks up to five years in advance

Researchers publish first ever structural engineering manual for bamboo

National poll: Less than half of parents say swearing is never OK for kids

Decades of suffering: Long-term mental health outcomes of Kurdish chemical gas attacks

Interactional dynamics of self-assessment and advice in peer reflection on microteaching

When aging affects the young: Revealing the weight of caregiving on teenagers

Can Canada’s health systems handle increased demand during FIFA World Cup?

Autistic and non-autistic faces may “speak a different language” when expressing emotion

No clear evidence that cannabis-based medicines relieve chronic nerve pain

Pioneering second-order nonlinear vibrational nanoscopy for interfacial molecular systems beyond the diffraction limit

Bottleneck in hydrogen distribution jeopardises billions in clean energy

Lung cancer death rates among women in Europe are finally levelling off

Scientists trace microplastics in fertilizer from fields to the beach

The Lancet Obstetrics, Gynecology, & Women’s Health: Taking paracetamol during pregnancy does not increase risk of autism, ADHD or intellectual disabilities, confirms new gold-standard evidence review

Taking paracetamol during pregnancy does not increase risk of autism, ADHD or intellectual disabilities

Harm reduction vending machines in New York State expand access to overdose treatment and drug test strips, UB studies confirm

University of Phoenix releases white paper on Credit for Prior Learning as a catalyst for internal mobility and retention

Canada losing track of salmon health as climate and industrial threats mount

Molecular sieve-confined Pt-FeOx catalysts achieve highly efficient reversible hydrogen cycle of methylcyclohexane-toluene

Investment in farm productivity tools key to reducing greenhouse gas

New review highlights electrochemical pathways to recover uranium from wastewater and seawater

[Press-News.org] How does stroke influence speech comprehension?
People with a stroke-related language disorder have key differences in brain activity compared to healthy controls that may explain their impaired verbal speech processing