Morning Overview on MSN
Learning to speak may depend less on your mouth than on how your brain hears sound
Researchers have found that the brain’s ability to hear and evaluate its own speech may matter more for learning new vocal ...
New Baycrest research reveals that the brain remembers what we see and what we hear in different ways. Visual memories tend ...
Problems understanding speech-in-noise (SIN) are commonly associated with peripheral hearing loss. But pure tone audiometry (PTA) alone fails to fully explain SIN ability. This is because SIN ...
Aleena Garner still remembers the moment she decided to pursue neurobiology. She was in an undergraduate chemistry class when realization struck: the human brain—that three-pound organ capable of ...
Attention can be allocated to mental representations to select information from working memory. To date, it remains ambiguous whether such retroactive shifts of attention involve the inhibition of ...
Research shows auditory memory carries deeper emotional weight than visual memory, driving a new field of voice preservation and grief technology. Maintaining a meaningful connection to a deceased ...
Sensory memory refers to very short-term memories about perceptions of the world through the five senses of sight, hearing, smell, touch, and taste. A fraction of the information captured in sensory ...
Clear hearing is essential for staying connected. Yet, for many, hearing challenges create barriers to communication and cognitive well-being. Tahoe Family Hearing Clinic is bridging that gap with ...
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