Abstract

The primary auditory cortex and other early auditory cortical areas lie on Heschl's gyrus within the Sylvian fissure. On the adjacent lateral surface of the superior temporal gyrus, the cortex processes higher order auditory information leading to auditory perception. On the ventral surface of the temporal lobe in the primate brain, there are areas that process higher order visual information leading to visual perception. These sensory-specific auditory and visual processing regions are separated by areas that integrate multisensory information within the deep superior temporal sulcus in both the macaque monkey and human brains. In the human brain, the multisensory integration cortex expands and forms the adjacent middle temporal gyrus. The expansion of this multisensory region in the language-dominant hemisphere of the human brain is critical for the emergence of semantic processing, namely, the processing of conceptual information that is not sensory specific but rather relies on multisensory integration.

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