Researchers identify a brain pathway in humans that enables rapid, unconscious fear responses to scary sounds, similar to visual fear shortcuts.
Preclinical studies on animals have identified brain pathways that drive quick, protective fear responses to "scary" sounds.
Physiological recordings in animals, including humans, have been consistent with two pathways in auditory regions, but conclusive evidence was lacking. Now, researchers have separated the "what" and ...
Researchers have developed a non-invasive method for mapping the human auditory pathway, which could potentially be used as a tool to help clinicians decide the best surgical strategy for patients ...
Patients with chronic back pain exhibit auditory hyperresponsivity linked to specific neural pathways and multisensory sensitivity patterns.
Tech Xplore on MSN
Human brain and AI speech recognition decode speech in similar step-by-step stages, study finds
Over the past decades, computer scientists have developed numerous artificial intelligence (AI) systems that can process human speech in different languages. The extent to which these models replicate ...
MyLifeXP on MSN
Why your ears won’t stop ringing: The shocking truth
Millions of people hear ringing, buzzing, or hissing in their ears daily, yet most dismiss it as a minor annoyance. Tinnitus is more than noise it’s a complex neurological and emotional signal that ...
Sudden loss triggers distinct neurological consequences, with auditory memory playing a central role in how the brain ...
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