Brain study shows speech learning relies on sensory processing, not motor control

sciencedaily.com

New research suggests speech learning relies more on sensory processing than motor control. The study found disrupting auditory and somatosensory brain areas impaired speech learning retention, while motor cortex disruption had minimal effect. This discovery could reshape speech therapy and inform the development of brain-based communication technologies.


With a significance score of 4, this news ranks in the top 5% of today's 33909 analyzed articles.

Get summaries of news with significance over 5.5 (usually ~10 stories per week). Read by 10,000+ subscribers:


Brain study shows speech learning relies on sensory processing, not motor control | News Minimalist