Journal article
The contribution of brainstem and cerebellar pathways to auditory recognition
NM McLachlan, SJ Wilson
Frontiers in Psychology | FRONTIERS MEDIA SA | Published : 2017
Abstract
The cerebellum has been known to play an important role in motor functions for many years. More recently its role has been expanded to include a range of cognitive and sensory-motor processes, and substantial neuroimaging and clinical evidence now points to cerebellar involvement in most auditory processing tasks. In particular, an increase in the size of the cerebellum over recent human evolution has been attributed in part to the development of speech. Despite this, the auditory cognition literature has largely overlooked afferent auditory connections to the cerebellum that have been implicated in acoustically conditioned reflexes in animals, and could subserve speech and other auditory pr..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was funded by an Australian Research Council Discovery project.