Amusia results in abnormal brain activity following inappropriate intonation during speech comprehension

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Amusia results in abnormal brain activity following inappropriate intonation during speech comprehension is …
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scholarly articleQ13442814

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P819ADS bibcode2012PLoSO...741411J
P356DOI10.1371/JOURNAL.PONE.0041411
P8608Fatcat IDrelease_tikaua34lrcq5p43igxegfmvt4
P932PMC publication ID3407197
P698PubMed publication ID22859982
P5875ResearchGate publication ID230616860

P50authorIan KirkQ113009196
Cunmei JiangQ57641416
Jeff P. HammQ112056530
P2093author name stringVanessa K Lim
Xuhai Chen
Yufang Yang
P2860cites workThe assessment and analysis of handedness: The Edinburgh inventoryQ26778476
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Abnormal electrical brain responses to pitch in congenital amusia.Q30351325
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Absolute pitch among American and Chinese conservatory students: prevalence differences, and evidence for a speech-related critical period.Q30353260
Cortical thickness in congenital amusia: when less is better than more.Q30366050
The amusic brain: in tune, out of key, and unaware.Q30375896
Absolute pitch among students in an American music conservatory: association with tone language fluency.Q30376044
Congenital amusia: a short-term memory deficit for non-verbal, but not verbal sounds.Q30380813
Prosody and parsing in coordination structuresQ38444471
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Bridging the Gap: Evidence from ERPs on the Processing of Unbounded DependenciesQ38470144
Intonational disambiguation in sentence production and comprehensionQ41723979
Prosody in the comprehension of spoken language: a literature reviewQ41724349
Brain potentials indicate immediate use of prosodic cues in natural speech processingQ46351895
Encoding of pitch in the human brainstem is sensitive to language experienceQ46448882
Inadequate and infrequent are not alike: ERPs to deviant prosodic patterns in spoken sentence comprehension.Q48207551
Late interaction of syntactic and prosodic processes in sentence comprehension as revealed by ERPs.Q48845623
The influence of prosodic structure on the resolution of temporary syntactic closure ambiguities.Q52049097
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Intonation processing in congenital amusia: discrimination, identification and imitation.Q30388520
Processing melodic contour and speech intonation in congenital amusics with Mandarin ChineseQ30389167
Congenital amusia in speakers of a tone language: association with lexical tone agnosiaQ30392297
Memory for pitch in congenital amusia: beyond a fine-grained pitch discrimination problem.Q30392587
Congenital Amusia (or Tone-Deafness) Interferes with Pitch Processing in Tone LanguagesQ30404544
Identification of Changes along a Continuum of Speech Intonation is Impaired in Congenital AmusiaQ30405863
Fine-grained pitch processing of music and speech in congenital amusiaQ30411420
The mechanism of speech processing in congenital amusia: evidence from Mandarin speakersQ30413257
Mismatch negativity to pitch contours is influenced by language experience.Q30416116
On tune deafness (dysmelodia): frequency, development, genetics and musical backgroundQ30416313
Tone deafness: a new disconnection syndrome?Q30483209
Action-perception mismatch in tone-deafnessQ30492267
Varieties of musical disorders. The Montreal Battery of Evaluation of AmusiaQ30540715
Musically tone-deaf individuals have difficulty discriminating intonation contours extracted from speechQ30541665
Morphometry of the amusic brain: a two-site studyQ30542007
Impaired memory for pitch in congenital amusiaQ30544990
Functional MRI evidence of an abnormal neural network for pitch processing in congenital amusiaQ30548809
Impaired categorical perception of lexical tones in Mandarin-speaking congenital amusics.Q30557700
Congenital amusia: an auditory-motor feedback disorder?Q33303024
Repair, revision, and complexity in syntactic analysis: an electrophysiological differentiationQ34177938
The N1 wave of the human electric and magnetic response to sound: a review and an analysis of the component structureQ34185761
Differential recognition of pitch patterns in discrete and gliding stimuli in congenital amusia: evidence from Mandarin speakers.Q34252169
Reading senseless sentences: brain potentials reflect semantic incongruityQ34285077
A capacity theory of comprehension: individual differences in working memoryQ34355093
An alternative perspective on "semantic P600" effects in language comprehensionQ37212542
Modeling the auditory scene: predictive regularity representations and perceptual objectsQ37614657
Semantic integration processes at different levels of syntactic hierarchy during sentence comprehension: an ERP studyQ38375931
Speech and span: working memory capacity impacts the use of animacy but not of world knowledge during spoken sentence comprehensionQ38377520
Semantic processing of mathematical gesturesQ38379698
An electrophysiological study of mood, modal context, and anaphora.Q38403551
Parallel encoding of focus and interrogative meaning in Mandarin intonation.Q38410136
Electrophysiological evidence for serial sentence processing: a comparison between non-preferred and ungrammatical continuationsQ38425987
Comparison of the N300 and N400 ERPs to picture stimuli in congruent and incongruent contextsQ38433277
P275copyright licenseCreative Commons Attribution 4.0 InternationalQ20007257
P6216copyright statuscopyrightedQ50423863
P433issue7
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectamusiaQ481787
P304page(s)e41411
P577publication date2012-07-27
P1433published inPLOS OneQ564954
P1476titleAmusia results in abnormal brain activity following inappropriate intonation during speech comprehension
P478volume7

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cites work (P2860)
Q30419543Brainstem encoding of speech and musical stimuli in congenital amusia: evidence from Cantonese speakers.
Q30369004Congenital amusia: a cognitive disorder limited to resolved harmonics and with no peripheral basis
Q38614167Deficits of congenital amusia beyond pitch: Evidence from impaired categorical perception of vowels in Cantonese-speaking congenital amusics.
Q98177510Dichotic Perception of Lexical Tones in Cantonese-Speaking Congenital Amusics
Q30355381Difficulties with pitch discrimination influences pitch memory performance: evidence from congenital amusia
Q30386190Examining pitch and numerical magnitude processing in congenital amusia: A quasi-experimental pilot study.
Q91604480Face recognition and memory in congenital amusia
Q57881941Music for the Brain Across Life
Q55300318Normal pre-attentive and impaired attentive processing of lexical tones in Cantonese-speaking congenital amusics.
Q30371266Perception of Melodic Contour and Intonation in Autism Spectrum Disorder: Evidence From Mandarin Speakers.
Q30391207Pitch perception and production in congenital amusia: Evidence from Cantonese speakers
Q30360088Processing of emotional faces in congenital amusia: An emotional music priming event-related potential study.
Q28603711Prosodic Structure as a Parallel to Musical Structure
Q30422995Reduced sensitivity to emotional prosody in congenital amusia rekindles the musical protolanguage hypothesis
Q41059444Revising the diagnosis of congenital amusia with the Montreal Battery of Evaluation of Amusia
Q30380030Sound frequency affects speech emotion perception: results from congenital amusia.
Q30431853Speech and music shape the listening brain: evidence for shared domain-general mechanisms.
Q30401506The Montreal Protocol for Identification of Amusia

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