How you process language is influenced by how each side of your brain developed in early life. Peter Dazeley/The Image Bank via Getty Images Your brain breaks apart fleeting streams of acoustic ...
Auditory hallucinations are likely the result of abnormalities in two brain processes: a “broken” corollary discharge that fails to suppress self-generated sounds, and a “noisy” efference copy that ...
Morning Overview on MSN
These hearing aids can tune in to your brain
Hearing aids are quietly undergoing a revolution, shifting from simple sound amplifiers to wearable computers that can read ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Human brains spike oddly when they hear chimp calls
Human brains do something peculiar when a chimpanzee screams or hoots. Instead of treating those sounds as generic animal ...
A new study comparing stroke survivors with healthy adults reveals that post-stroke language disorders stem not from slower ...
Sensory overload is often about uncertainty and how long the brain has to stay engaged—especially in autism and ADHD.
DEAR MAYO CLINIC: I've heard there might be a link between hearing loss and brain health. Can you explain how it could affect my cognitive function and what I can do to reduce the risks? ANSWER: ...
(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Your brain breaks apart fleeting streams of acoustic information into parallel ...
The cognitive neural mechanism of auditory hallucinations. Dissociative impairment of functional distinct signals in motor-to-sensory transformation process – a ‘broken’ monitoring signal plus a ...
(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Hysell V. Oviedo, Washington University in St. Louis (THE CONVERSATION) Some of the ...
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