William J. Talkington

Affiliations: 
West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, United States 
Area:
Human Auditory Cortex
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"William Talkington"
Mean distance: 16.49 (cluster 23)
 
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James W. Lewis grad student 2007-2013 West Virginia University
 (Early and Late Stage Mechanisms for Vocalization Processing in the Human Auditory System.)
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Publications

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Talkington WJ, Donai J, Kadner AS, et al. (2020) Electrophysiological Evidence of Early Cortical Sensitivity to Human Conspecific Mimic Voice as a Distinct Category of Natural Sound. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research : Jslhr. 1-21
Talkington WJ, Pollard BS, Olesh EV, et al. (2015) Multifunctional Setup for Studying Human Motor Control Using Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, Electromyography, Motion Capture, and Virtual Reality. Journal of Visualized Experiments : Jove
Talkington WJ, Taglialatela JP, Lewis JW. (2013) Using naturalistic utterances to investigate vocal communication processing and development in human and non-human primates. Hearing Research. 305: 74-85
Talkington WJ, Rapuano KM, Hitt LA, et al. (2012) Humans mimicking animals: a cortical hierarchy for human vocal communication sounds. The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society For Neuroscience. 32: 8084-93
Lewis JW, Talkington WJ, Tallaksen KC, et al. (2012) Auditory object salience: human cortical processing of non-biological action sounds and their acoustic signal attributes. Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience. 6: 27
Lewis JW, Frum C, Brefczynski-Lewis JA, et al. (2011) Cortical network differences in the sighted versus early blind for recognition of human-produced action sounds. Human Brain Mapping. 32: 2241-55
Lewis JW, Talkington WJ, Puce A, et al. (2011) Cortical networks representing object categories and high-level attributes of familiar real-world action sounds. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 23: 2079-101
Lewis JW, Talkington WJ, Walker NA, et al. (2009) Human cortical organization for processing vocalizations indicates representation of harmonic structure as a signal attribute. The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society For Neuroscience. 29: 2283-96
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