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Easy anomalies preferentially engaged lower-order cortical areas adjacent to the primaryauditorycortex.
2
Response latencies in this area were even shorter than in primaryauditorycortex.
3
The characteristics of dipoles in the superior temporal gyrus, the primaryauditorycortex, were calculated.
4
The source of N100m was considered to spread from the primaryauditorycortex to the secondary auditory cortex.
5
Responses exhibited long-lasting habituation (at least 20 min) in the secondary, but not primaryauditorycortex.
6
Although particular attention was paid to the primaryauditorycortex (PAC), a brain-wide analysis was also performed.
7
Such nonlinearities were most prevalent in primaryauditorycortex, although they tended to be small compared with stimulus main effects.
8
The present magnetoencephalography study was designed to investigate the influence of peripheral synchronisation on the activation in primaryauditorycortex.
9
These findings provide evidence for a diminished neuronal representation of short auditory stimuli in the primaryauditorycortex of LP children.
10
The cytoarchitectonically defined areal borders of the primaryauditorycortex do not consistently match macroanatomic landmarks like gyral and sulcal borders.
11
This result confirms the theory of impaired auditory information processing in patients with schizophrenia at the level of the primaryauditorycortex.
12
The primaryauditorycortex, in the temporal lobe, is involved in hearing, and there are other areas involved with high-level auditory processing.
13
Following repetitive presentation of novel complex sounds, we observed significant response habituation in secondary auditory cortex, but not in primaryauditorycortex.
14
Single-unit activity was recorded from primaryauditorycortex of awake ferrets during presentation of noise with natural temporal dynamics and fully natural sounds.
15
Here we show that this information can in fact be found in the neuronal population code of the primaryauditorycortex (A1).
16
Acoustic stimuli are received by the ear, where they are converted to electric impulses and sent to the primaryauditorycortex, in both hemispheres.