A new study comparing stroke survivors with healthy adults reveals that post-stroke language disorders stem not from slower ...
What happens inside your brain when you hear a steady rhythm or musical tone? According to a new study from Aarhus University and the University of Oxford, your brain doesn't just hear it-it ...
Following stroke, some people experience a language disorder that hinders their ability to process speech sounds.
Sound is not just something we hear—it’s vibration, and vibration interacts directly with the human body at a cellular level.
When we are engaged in a task, our brain’s auditory system changes how it works. One of the main auditory centers of the brain, auditory cortex, is filled with neural activity that is not sound driven ...
New research reveals that an area in the brain known as the inferior colliculus plays a critical role in processing both sound and touch in the form of mechanical vibrations to create an augmented ...
Researchers mapped the brain connectivity of 960 individuals to uncover how fast and slow neural processes unite to support complex behavior.