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5 - Brain bases for seeing speech:

fMRI studies of speechreading

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2012

Gérard Bailly
Affiliation:
Université de Grenoble
Pascal Perrier
Affiliation:
Université de Grenoble
Eric Vatikiotis-Bateson
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia, Vancouver

Information

Figure 0

Figure 5.1 A schematic view of the left hemisphere, showing its major folds (sulci) and convolutions (gyri). Two language areas are also shown: “B” is Broca’s area; “W” is Wernicke’s area. These are general (functional) regions, not specific cortical locales (adapted from Damasio and Damasio 1989).

Figure 1

Figure 5.2 Functional organization of the cortex, lateral view, adapted from Luria (1973). Primary regions are shaded darker, secondary areas are shaded lighter. Unshaded regions can be considered tertiary. V=vision, A=audition, S = somatosensory, M = motor.

Figure 2

Figure 5.3 This schematic view “opens out” the superior surface of the temporal lobe, as if the frontal lobe has been drawn away from the temporal lobe on which it normally lies. This reveals the superior temporal plane (STP) including the planum temporale (PT), and Heschl’s gyrus (HG). Within this extensive region are critical sites for acoustic analysis. Primary auditory cortex (A1) occupies HG. On the lateral surface of the temporal lobe, and visible in lateral view, the uppermost gyrus is the superior temporal gyrus (STG), with the superior temporal sulcus (STS) along its ventral parts (after Wise et al.2001). This comprises region A2. The lower shaded arrow shows the approximate direction of forward flow of the anterior, ventral auditory stream (“what”); the upper shaded arrow shows the posterior, dorsal (“where/how”) stream.

Figure 3

Figure 5.4 Lateral views of the left and right hemispheres, with areas of activation indicated schematically as bounded ellipses. Speechreading and hearing activate primary and secondary auditory cortex (small grey textured ellipse, white border). Speechreading alone (open ellipses, black border) activates other lateral temporal and posterior, visual processing regions. The ellipses correspond approximately to the regions illustrated in figure 1 of Calvert et al. (1997).

Figure 4

Figure 5.5 Schematic showing differential activation in the lateral temporal lobes when watching non-speech actions (white-bordered grey ellipse) and watching speech (black-bordered ellipse). Renderings based on data from Campbell et al. (2001). A peak activation site in right STS is activated by both types of face action. Speech, but not gurn observation extended into auditory cortex.

Figure 5

Figure 5.6 Schematic lateral view of left hemisphere highlighting superior temporal regions. Superior temporal sulcus (STS) is the ventral (under-) part of superior temporal gyrus (STG). The directions of the (auditory) ventral, anterior (“what”) and dorsal posterior (“how”) speech streams are schematically indicated as shaded arrows – the lighter arrow indicates the dorsal stream, the darker arrow the ventral stream.

Figure 6

Figure 5.7 Audiovisual binding: A role for STS. Activation in STS (audiovisual speech) can enhance activation in primary auditory sensory cortex (A) and visual movement cortex (V5/MT) (from Calvert et al.2000).

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