All Relations between phonological and prefrontal cortex

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Magdalene Ortmann, Arne Knief, Dirk Deuster, Stephanie Brinkheetker, Pienie Zwitserlood, Antoinette am Zehnhoff-Dinnesen, Christian Dobe. Neural correlates of speech processing in prelingually deafened children and adolescents with cochlear implants. PloS one. vol 8. issue 7. 2014-02-03. PMID:23861784. these results indicate that the two ci groups developed different auditory speech processing strategies and stress the role of phonological functions of auditory sensory memory and the prefrontal cortex in positively developing speech perception and production. 2014-02-03 2023-08-12 Not clear
Timothy M Ellmore, Fiona Rohlffs, Faraz Khurshee. FMRI of working memory impairment after recovery from subarachnoid hemorrhage. Frontiers in neurology. vol 4. 2013-11-13. PMID:24223572. activity increases remained after factoring out inter-individual differences in age and task performance, and included most notably left hemisphere regions associated with phonological loop processing, bilateral sensorimotor regions, and right hemisphere dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. 2013-11-13 2023-08-12 human
F Simard, L Monetta, A Nagano-Saito, O Monch. A new lexical card-sorting task for studying fronto-striatal contribution to processing language rules. Brain and language. vol 125. issue 3. 2013-10-23. PMID:21925720. semantic decisions activated significantly the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, the fusiform gyrus, the ventral temporal lobe and the caudate nucleus, while phonological decisions produced significant activation in posterior broca's area (area 44), the temporoparietal junction and motor cortical regions. 2013-10-23 2023-08-12 human
Karen Emmorey, Jill Weisberg, Stephen McCullough, Jennifer A F Petric. Mapping the reading circuitry for skilled deaf readers: an fMRI study of semantic and phonological processing. Brain and language. vol 126. issue 2. 2013-10-21. PMID:23747332. deaf readers also showed stronger anterior-posterior functional segregation between semantic and phonological processes in left inferior prefrontal cortex. 2013-10-21 2023-08-12 human
Emma Salo, Teemu Rinne, Oili Salonen, Kimmo Alh. Brain activity during auditory and visual phonological, spatial and simple discrimination tasks. Brain research. vol 1496. 2013-08-12. PMID:23261663. nevertheless, brain activations caused by auditory and visual phonological tasks overlapped in the left mid-lateral prefrontal cortex, while those caused by the auditory and visual spatial tasks overlapped in the inferior parietal cortex. 2013-08-12 2023-08-12 human
Ioulia Kovelman, Elizabeth S Norton, Joanna A Christodoulou, Nadine Gaab, Daniel A Lieberman, Christina Triantafyllou, Maryanne Wolf, Susan Whitfield-Gabrieli, John D E Gabriel. Brain basis of phonological awareness for spoken language in children and its disruption in dyslexia. Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991). vol 22. issue 4. 2012-10-12. PMID:21693783. typically developing children, but not children with dyslexia, recruited left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlpfc) when making explicit phonological judgments. 2012-10-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
Marina Bedny, Alvaro Pascual-Leone, David Dodell-Feder, Evelina Fedorenko, Rebecca Sax. Language processing in the occipital cortex of congenitally blind adults. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. vol 108. issue 11. 2011-05-16. PMID:21368161. we find that in congenitally blind individuals, the left visual cortex behaves similarly to classic language regions: (i) bold signal is higher during sentence comprehension than during linguistically degraded control conditions that are more difficult; (ii) bold signal is modulated by phonological information, lexical semantic information, and sentence-level combinatorial structure; and (iii) functional connectivity with language regions in the left prefrontal cortex and thalamus are increased relative to sighted individuals. 2011-05-16 2023-08-12 Not clear
Frank Eisner, Carolyn McGettigan, Andrew Faulkner, Stuart Rosen, Sophie K Scot. Inferior frontal gyrus activation predicts individual differences in perceptual learning of cochlear-implant simulations. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. vol 30. issue 21. 2010-06-15. PMID:20505085. neurally, left-lateralized regions in superior temporal sulcus and inferior frontal gyrus (ifg) were sensitive to the learnability of the simulations, but only the activity in prefrontal cortex correlated with interindividual variation in intelligibility scores and phonological working memory. 2010-06-15 2023-08-12 Not clear
Martha W Burto. Understanding the role of the prefrontal cortex in phonological processing. Clinical linguistics & phonetics. vol 23. issue 3. 2009-06-09. PMID:19283576. understanding the role of the prefrontal cortex in phonological processing. 2009-06-09 2023-08-12 Not clear
Nelly Mainy, Philippe Kahane, Lorella Minotti, Dominique Hoffmann, Olivier Bertrand, Jean-Philippe Lachau. Neural correlates of consolidation in working memory. Human brain mapping. vol 28. issue 3. 2007-05-01. PMID:16767775. we found such activities in the form of increases of gamma band activity in a set of regions associated with the phonological loop, including the broca area and the auditory cortex, and in the prefrontal cortex, the pre- and postcentral gyri, the hippocampus, and the fusiform gyrus. 2007-05-01 2023-08-12 human
Myra A Fernandes, Morris Moscovitch, Marilyne Ziegler, Cheryl Grad. Brain regions associated with successful and unsuccessful retrieval of verbal episodic memory as revealed by divided attention. Neuropsychologia. vol 43. issue 8. 2005-08-22. PMID:15817169. increases in activation of left prefrontal cortex (pfc), associated with phonological processing, were observed in the word- compared to number-based da condition. 2005-08-22 2023-08-12 human
Myra A Fernandes, Morris Moscovitch, Marilyne Ziegler, Cheryl Grad. Brain regions associated with successful and unsuccessful retrieval of verbal episodic memory as revealed by divided attention. Neuropsychologia. vol 43. issue 8. 2005-08-22. PMID:15817169. results suggest that the medial temporal lobe (mtl) and neo-cortical components of retrieval, believed to form the basis of episodic memory traces, are disrupted when phonological processing regions in left pfc are engaged simultaneously by another task. 2005-08-22 2023-08-12 human
Itamar Kahn, Alvaro Pascual-Leone, Hugo Theoret, Felipe Fregni, Dav Clark, Anthony D Wagne. Transient disruption of ventrolateral prefrontal cortex during verbal encoding affects subsequent memory performance. Journal of neurophysiology. vol 94. issue 1. 2005-08-16. PMID:15758048. prior functional neuroimaging data indicate that episodic encoding during phonological task performance is correlated with activation in bilateral posterior ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (pvlpfc), although uncertainty remains regarding whether these prefrontal regions make necessary contributions to episodic memory formation. 2005-08-16 2023-08-12 human
Fernando Maestú, Pablo Campo, Almudena Capilla, Panagiotis G Simos, Nuria Paúl, Santiago Fernandez, Alberto Fernández, Carlos Amo, Javier González-Marqués, Tomás Orti. Prefrontal brain magnetic activity: effects of memory task demands. Neuropsychology. vol 19. issue 3. 2005-08-09. PMID:15910116. greater activity for the phonological memory task was restricted to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlpfc) in the left hemisphere. 2005-08-09 2023-08-12 human
Xiaojian Li, Jack Gandour, Thomas Talavage, Donald Wong, Mario Dzemidzic, Mark Lowe, Yunxia Ton. Selective attention to lexical tones recruits left dorsal frontoparietal network. Neuroreport. vol 14. issue 17. 2004-05-25. PMID:14625459. phonological processing activates a posterior superior region of inferior prefrontal cortex, but questions still remain about the relationship between phonology and this particular region. 2004-05-25 2023-08-12 human
Joseph T Devlin, Paul M Matthews, Matthew F S Rushwort. Semantic processing in the left inferior prefrontal cortex: a combined functional magnetic resonance imaging and transcranial magnetic stimulation study. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. vol 15. issue 1. 2003-03-26. PMID:12590844. the involvement of the left inferior prefrontal cortex (lipc) in phonological processing is well established from both lesion-deficit studies with neurological patients and functional neuroimaging studies of normals. 2003-03-26 2023-08-12 human
Dav Clark, Anthony D Wagne. Assembling and encoding word representations: fMRI subsequent memory effects implicate a role for phonological control. Neuropsychologia. vol 41. issue 3. 2003-03-05. PMID:12457756. results revealed that left inferior prefrontal cortex (lipc) and bilateral parietal cortices were differentially engaged during the processing of novel words, suggesting that this circuit is recruited during phonological assembly. 2003-03-05 2023-08-12 human
Leun J Otten, Richard N A Henson, Michael D Rug. State-related and item-related neural correlates of successful memory encoding. Nature neuroscience. vol 5. issue 12. 2003-01-03. PMID:12402040. these correlations were found in inferior medial parietal and left prefrontal cortex for the semantic task, and in superior medial parietal cortex for the phonological task. 2003-01-03 2023-08-12 human
Laura H F Barde, Sharon L Thompson-Schil. Models of functional organization of the lateral prefrontal cortex in verbal working memory: evidence in favor of the process model. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. vol 14. issue 7. 2002-12-31. PMID:12419128. specifically, the anterior region of the ventrolateral pfc (ba 47/45) is hypothesized to subserve semantic processing while the posterior region (ba 44) may subserve phonological processing. 2002-12-31 2023-08-12 human
Laura H F Barde, Sharon L Thompson-Schil. Models of functional organization of the lateral prefrontal cortex in verbal working memory: evidence in favor of the process model. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. vol 14. issue 7. 2002-12-31. PMID:12419128. we did not find evidence during the delay period of our task to support claims of anterior-posterior specializations in the ventrolateral pfc for semantic versus phonological processing. 2002-12-31 2023-08-12 human