To study the effects of linguistic background on auditory processing,
magnetoencephalographic responses for pure tones (120 Hz, 1 and 4
kHz), u and a complex tone (with three pure tone components corresponding
to the three lowest formant frequencies of u) were recorded in
ten Finnish and ten Swedish speaking Finnish males. Auditory cortical
activation, maximal at about 100 ms after stimulus onset, was stronger
in the right hemisphere (RH) for all stimuli. At 175-225 ms, Swedish
speaking subjects had larger inter-hemispheric differences and different
signal morphology in the RH than Finnish speaking subjects, suggesting
that linguistic background influences basic auditory processes. Possibly,
Swedish speaking subjects had retained a juvenile response component
due to their bilingual surrounding after early childhood.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Vihla2002
%A Vihla, Minna
%A Kiviniemi, Katri
%A Salmelin, Riitta
%D 2002
%J Neuroscience Letters
%K Acoustic Cortex,Auditory Cortex: Laterality,Humans,Language,Magnetoencephalography,Male,Speech Perception,Speech Perception: Potentials,Finland,Finnish,Functional Stimulation,Adult,Auditory,Auditory physiology,Auditory: physiology,Evoked physiology,Sweden,Swedish,language,neuro,vowels
%N 3
%P 141--4
%T Auditory cortical activation in Finnish and Swedish speaking Finns:
a magnetoencephalographic study
%U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11897158
%V 322
%X To study the effects of linguistic background on auditory processing,
magnetoencephalographic responses for pure tones (120 Hz, 1 and 4
kHz), u and a complex tone (with three pure tone components corresponding
to the three lowest formant frequencies of u) were recorded in
ten Finnish and ten Swedish speaking Finnish males. Auditory cortical
activation, maximal at about 100 ms after stimulus onset, was stronger
in the right hemisphere (RH) for all stimuli. At 175-225 ms, Swedish
speaking subjects had larger inter-hemispheric differences and different
signal morphology in the RH than Finnish speaking subjects, suggesting
that linguistic background influences basic auditory processes. Possibly,
Swedish speaking subjects had retained a juvenile response component
due to their bilingual surrounding after early childhood.
@article{Vihla2002,
abstract = {To study the effects of linguistic background on auditory processing,
magnetoencephalographic responses for pure tones (120 Hz, 1 and 4
kHz), [u] and a complex tone (with three pure tone components corresponding
to the three lowest formant frequencies of [u]) were recorded in
ten Finnish and ten Swedish speaking Finnish males. Auditory cortical
activation, maximal at about 100 ms after stimulus onset, was stronger
in the right hemisphere (RH) for all stimuli. At 175-225 ms, Swedish
speaking subjects had larger inter-hemispheric differences and different
signal morphology in the RH than Finnish speaking subjects, suggesting
that linguistic background influences basic auditory processes. Possibly,
Swedish speaking subjects had retained a juvenile response component
due to their bilingual surrounding after early childhood.},
added-at = {2011-03-27T17:20:41.000+0200},
author = {Vihla, Minna and Kiviniemi, Katri and Salmelin, Riitta},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2ce9fbb27cf1795fa134047f1b1b6070b/yevb0},
file = {:Vihla, Kiviniemi, Salmelin_2002_Auditory cortical activation in Finnish and Swedish speaking Finns a magnetoencephalographic study.pdf:PDF},
interhash = {7dd7a204153cf549d4b002edf50930ce},
intrahash = {ce9fbb27cf1795fa134047f1b1b6070b},
issn = {0304-3940},
journal = {Neuroscience Letters},
keywords = {Acoustic Cortex,Auditory Cortex: Laterality,Humans,Language,Magnetoencephalography,Male,Speech Perception,Speech Perception: Potentials,Finland,Finnish,Functional Stimulation,Adult,Auditory,Auditory physiology,Auditory: physiology,Evoked physiology,Sweden,Swedish,language,neuro,vowels},
mendeley-tags = {Finnish,Swedish,language,neuro,vowels},
month = apr,
number = 3,
pages = {141--4},
pmid = {11897158},
timestamp = {2011-03-27T17:21:12.000+0200},
title = {Auditory cortical activation in Finnish and Swedish speaking Finns:
a magnetoencephalographic study},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11897158},
volume = 322,
year = 2002
}