search

UMD     This Site





Prof. Jonathan Z. Simon

Prof. Jonathan Z. Simon

 

Prof. Jonathan Z. Simon (ECE/ISR/Biology) has been awarded a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for his research, titled "The Neural Basis of Perceptually-Relevant Auditory Modulations in Humans." The five-year grant is worth approximately $1.2 million.

A significant challenge in auditory neuroscience is to understand how speech and other natural sounds are analyzed and encoded in the auditory cortex of the human brain. A major finding is that perception and speech processing are crucially affected by temporal modulations in the acoustic signal. However, identifying the physiological mechanisms that underlie perceptually-relevant temporal modulations presents a considerable technical challenge.

The goal of Simon's research program is to understand how acoustic modulations, the building blocks of speech and other natural sounds are encoded in the auditory cortex.

Prof. Simon's research employs magnetoencephalography (MEG), a non-invasive tool suitable for use in humans that records high-speed neural signals from the entire brain. Simon will use MEG and extracellular recording in complementary ways, to investigate how temporal modulations are encoded by the auditory cortex in the brain.

For more information about the research, visit Prof. Simon's web page.

February 27, 2008


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

ECE Professor Kaiqing Zhang Receives Donald P. Eckman Award

Generations of Graduates: A Full-Circle Celebration

Apply: Chair of the Fischell Dept of Bioengineering

Capstone Design Expo 2026: Students Solve for Maryland & Beyond

CS/ECE Professors Receive IEEE ICRA Most Influential Paper Award

New Lecture Series Unites Experts to Solve Critical Challenges

NIH Funds "Smart Pill" for Gut Health Monitoring

UMD to Lead DARPA-Funded Effort to Accelerate Mathematical Discovery With AI

ION Storage Systems Announced Successful Customer Qualification

Engineering safer, more sustainable AI for all

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home