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Visit anonymous-1077600's column >>

ANONYMOUS-1077600

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Everytime I look my Parallel Universe Changes
Articles Posted: 32  Links Seeded: 815
Member Since: 5/2009  Last Seen: 5/16/2012

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How brain hears the sound of silence: Separate brain pathways process the start and end of what we hear

Seeded on Fri Feb 12, 2010 8:55 AM EST
Read ArticleArticle Source: Science Daily
health, psychology, brain, speech, reading, hearing, listening, university-of-oregon, hearing-devices, neuroimaging, temporal-lobe, auditory-cortez, ben-scholl, cochlear-implants-dyslexia, hearing-aides, independent-processing-channel-of-synapses, michael-wehr, oregon-health-and-science-university-in-portland, process-of-reading, robert-and-beverly-lewis-center-for-neuroimaging-f, sound-processing, xiang-gao-hearing
Seeded by anonymous-1077600
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A team of University of Oregon researchers have isolated an independent processing channel of synapses inside the brain's auditory cortex that deals specifically with shutting off sound processing at appropriate times. Such regulation is vital for hearing and for understanding speech.

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anonymous-1077600

The discovery, detailed in the Feb. 11 issue of the journal Neuron, goes against a long-held assumption that the signaling of a sound's appearance and its subsequent disappearance are both handled by the same pathway. The new finding, which supports an emerging theory that a separate set of synapses is responsible, could lead to new, distinctly targeted therapies such as improved hearing devices, said Michael Wehr, a professor of psychology and member of the UO Institute of Neuroscience.

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Reply#1 - Fri Feb 12, 2010 8:57 AM EST
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