TY - T1 - Predictive processing increases intelligibility of acoustically distorted speech : Behavioral and neural correlates SN - / UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10138/225792 T3 - A1 - Hakonen, Maria; May, Patrick J. C.; Jaaskelainen, Iiro P.; Jokinen, Emma; Sams, Mikko; Tiitinen, Hannu A2 - PB - Y1 - 2017 LA - eng AB - Introduction: We examined which brain areas are involved in the comprehension of acoustically distorted speech using an experimental paradigm where the same distorted sentence can be perceived at different levels of intelligibility. This change in intelligibility occurs via a single intervening presentation of the intact version of the sentence, and the effect lasts at least on the order of minutes. Since the acoustic structure of the distorted stimulus is kept fixed and only intelligibility is ... VO - IS - SP - OP - KW - acoustic distortion; comprehension; functional magnetic resonance imaging; intelligibility; memory; speech; ADVERSE LISTENING CONDITIONS; HUMAN AUDITORY-CORTEX; DEGRADED SPEECH; WORKING-MEMORY; COGNITIVE CONTROL; EPISODIC MEMORY; VISUAL-CORTEX; BRAIN IMAGES; NOISE; PERCEPTION; 3112 Neurosciences; 3124 Neurology and psychiatry N1 - PP - ER -