PSYB65H3 Chapter 8: Chapter 8 Textbook Notes (Exclude Lecture Covered Materials)

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17 Dec 2010
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Instruments usually produces overtones that are at frequencies higher than the fundamental frequency, these overtones also vary in their intensities. Thus making this model spoken and heard: wernicke-lichtheim-geschwind (wlg) model. added angular gyrus: located at the junction between the temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes. It receives projections from primary and secondary visual areas and provide a basis for visual language. this accounts for why you hear a voice in your head when you read (the words go through the primary and secondary visual cortex transcribed into sound images, which is then ascribed meaning. angular gyrus. since words can be read either way, some argued that there are 2 functionally distinct routes phonological route and whole-word route) some argue that both types of reading could be subserved by a single distributed network single route model. www. notesolution. com.