Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
925280 Brain and Language 2014 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Two comprehensive auditory–prefrontal networks are acquired by means of systematic data collation and literature analysis.•Efficient quantitative procedure for assessing auditory processing streams is provided.•Implications for neurobiology of language are discussed.•Preliminary analyses include parietal structures as well.

Primate sensory systems subserve complex neurocomputational functions. Consequently, these systems are organised anatomically in a distributed fashion, commonly linking areas to form specialised processing streams. Each stream is related to a specific function, as evidenced from studies of the visual cortex, which features rather prominent segregation into spatial and non-spatial domains. It has been hypothesised that other sensory systems, including auditory, are organised in a similar way on the cortical level. Recent studies offer rich qualitative evidence for the dual stream hypothesis. Here we provide a new paradigm to quantitatively uncover these patterns in the auditory system, based on an analysis of multiple anatomical studies using multivariate techniques. As a test case, we also apply our assessment techniques to more ubiquitously-explored visual system. Importantly, the introduced framework opens the possibility for these techniques to be applied to other neural systems featuring a dichotomised organisation, such as language or music perception.

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