All Relations between spindle-shaped and pSTS

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Brent C Vander Wyk, Gordon J Ramsay, Caitlin M Hudac, Warren Jones, David Lin, Ami Klin, Su Mei Lee, Kevin A Pelphre. Cortical integration of audio-visual speech and non-speech stimuli. Brain and cognition. vol 74. issue 2. 2011-06-30. PMID:20709442. ellipse-speech, which most resembles naturalistic audio-visual speech, showed higher activation in the right inferior frontal gyrus, fusiform gyri, left posterior superior temporal sulcus, and lateral occipital cortex. 2011-06-30 2023-08-12 Not clear
Ioannis Kontaris, Alison J Wiggett, Paul E Downin. Dissociation of extrastriate body and biological-motion selective areas by manipulation of visual-motor congruency. Neuropsychologia. vol 47. issue 14. 2010-01-25. PMID:19643118. we used fmri to examine the extrastriate body area (eba), the fusiform body area (fba), and an area in the posterior superior temporal sulcus (psts) that responds to patterns of human biological motion. 2010-01-25 2023-08-12 human
Christopher J Fox, Giuseppe Iaria, Jason J S Barto. Defining the face processing network: optimization of the functional localizer in fMRI. Human brain mapping. vol 30. issue 5. 2009-07-02. PMID:18661501. we then determined for each core face processing roi, the cluster size associated with maximum statistical face-selectivity, which on average was approximately 50 mm(3) for the fusiform face area, the occipital face area, and the posterior superior temporal sulcus. 2009-07-02 2023-08-12 human
Christopher J Fox, So Young Moon, Giuseppe Iaria, Jason J S Barto. The correlates of subjective perception of identity and expression in the face network: an fMRI adaptation study. NeuroImage. vol 44. issue 2. 2009-02-19. PMID:18852053. both the fusiform face area (ffa) and the posterior superior temporal sulcus (psts) showed release from adaptation when subjects perceived a change in either identity or expression, although in the psts this effect only occurred when subjects were explicitly attending to expression. 2009-02-19 2023-08-12 human
James P Morris, Kevin A Pelphrey, Gregory McCarth. Occipitotemporal activation evoked by the perception of human bodies is modulated by the presence or absence of the face. Neuropsychologia. vol 44. issue 10. 2006-09-19. PMID:16545844. these included portions of the fusiform (ffg) and lingual gyri within ventral occipitotemporal cortex (votc), and portions of the middle occipital gyrus (corresponding to the previously defined extrastriate body area, or eba) and posterior superior temporal sulcus (psts) within lateral occipitotemporal cortex (lotc). 2006-09-19 2023-08-12 human
Emily D Grossman, Randolph Blake, Chai-Youn Ki. Learning to see biological motion: brain activity parallels behavior. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. vol 16. issue 9. 2005-03-08. PMID:15601527. we trained observers to discriminate biological motion from scrambled (nonbiological) motion and examined whether the resulting improvement in perceptual performance was accompanied by changes in activation within the posterior superior temporal sulcus and the fusiform ''face area,'' brain areas involved in perception of biological events. 2005-03-08 2023-08-12 human
Emily D Grossman, Randolph Blake, Chai-Youn Ki. Learning to see biological motion: brain activity parallels behavior. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. vol 16. issue 9. 2005-03-08. PMID:15601527. neural activity within the posterior superior temporal sulcus and the fusiform ''face area'' reflected the participants' learning: bold signals were significantly larger after training in response both to animations experienced during training and to novel animations. 2005-03-08 2023-08-12 human
J S Winston, R N A Henson, M R Fine-Goulden, R J Dola. fMRI-adaptation reveals dissociable neural representations of identity and expression in face perception. Journal of neurophysiology. vol 92. issue 3. 2004-11-04. PMID:15115795. repeating identity across face pairs led to reduced fmri signal in fusiform cortex and posterior superior temporal sulcus (sts), whereas repeating emotional expression across pairs led to reduced signal in a more anterior region of sts. 2004-11-04 2023-08-12 Not clear