A new study suggests that learning and remembering speech relies more on how the brain processes sounds and sensations than on the areas that control mouth and face movements. The discovery could ...
A new brain study suggests speech learning relies more on listening and self-correction than muscle memory, changing how experts understand language development.
New Baycrest research reveals that the brain remembers what we see and what we hear in different ways. Visual memories tend ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Learning to speak may depend less on your mouth than on how your brain hears sound
Researchers have found that the brain’s ability to hear and evaluate its own speech may matter more for learning new vocal ...
Short-term memories are thought to be formed deep within the brain in structures such as the hippocampus, but little is known about how and where memory-related information is kept in the brain or the ...
The unconscious brain appears to be far more capable than scientists once believed. Researchers found that patients under ...
Every time you master a new recipe, remember a phone number, or finally figure out how to fold a fitted sheet, your brain is learning. But new research shows that the brain learns in a more complex ...
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