April 14, 2005 01 h 01 min
April 14, 2005 24 min
May 12, 2005 52 min
February 4, 2005 01 h 18 min
October 17, 2007 49 min
June 27, 2007 01 h 12 min
July 11, 2007 48 min
September 12, 2007 01 h 07 min
September 19, 2007 01 h 13 min
September 26, 2007 01 h 00 min
October 3, 2007 01 h 12 min
October 10, 2007 01 h 10 min
October 24, 2007 50 min
November 21, 2007 57 min
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The human voice carries speech but also a wealth of socially-relevant, speaker-related information. Listeners routinely perceive precious information on the speaker’s identity (gender, age), affective state (happy, scared), as well as more subtle cues on perceived personality traits (attractiveness, dominance, etc.), strongly influencing social interactions. Using voice psychoacoustics and neuroimaging techniques, we examine the cerebral processing of person-related information in perceptual and neural voice representations. Results indicate a cerebral architecture of voice cognition sharing many similarities with the cerebral organization of face processing, with the main types of information in voices (identity, affect, speech) processed in interacting, but partly dissociable functional pathways.