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Feindel Brain and Mind Seminar Series: From Sound to Meaning: Neural Coding Principles Underlying Speech and Music Perception

Monday, January 19, 2026 13:00to14:00
De Grandpré Communications Centre, The Neuro

The Feindel Brain and Mind Seminar Series will advance the vision of Dr. William Feindel (1918–2014), Former Director of the Neuro (1972–1984), to constantly bridge the clinical and research realms. The talks will highlight the latest advances and discoveries in neuropsychology, cognitive neuroscience, and neuroimaging.

Speakers will include scientists from across The Neuro, as well as colleagues and collaborators locally and from around the world. The series is intended to provide a virtual forum for scientists and trainees to continue to foster interdisciplinary exchanges on the mechanisms, diagnosis and treatment of brain and cognitive disorders.


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Host: Robert Zatorre


From Sound to Meaning: Neural Coding Principles Underlying Speech and Music Perception

Abstract: The ability to distinguish speech from music is a hallmark of human auditory cognition, yet the neural principles supporting this distinction remain debated. Competing theories propose either specialized cortical networks dedicated to distinct sound categories or a domain-general organization in which categorical perception emerges from efficient coding of acoustic features. To support the latter view, a growing body of evidence suggests that the brain’s representation of sounds can be understood in terms of spectrotemporal modulations—joint variations in frequency and time that capture essential features of natural auditory scenes. By examining how the auditory cortex encodes these modulations, our recent intracranial recordings reveal that patterns of neural activity aligned with these features are sufficient to predict whether a sound is perceived as speech or music. This perspective supports a domain-general framework in which the brain’s sensitivity to fundamental acoustic statistics gives rise to higher-order perceptual categories, linking the physics of sound to the emergence of meaning.

Jérémie Ginzburg

Postdoctoral researcher, Auditory Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, The Neuro, 9IÖÆ×÷³§Ãâ·Ñ

Jérémie Ginzburg is a postdoctoral researcher in the Auditory Cognitive Neuroscience laboratory at 9IÖÆ×÷³§Ãâ·Ñ university, led by Prof. Zatorre. He previously achieved his PhD at the Centre de Recherche en Neurosciences de Lyon (France), under the supervision of Dr. Caclin, where he studied behavioral and neurophysiological markers of verbal and musical cognition during child development. He is now studying efficient neural coding of naturalistic complex sounds using intracranial recordings and 7-Tesla fMRI.

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The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital)Ìýis a bilingual academic healthcare institution. We are aÌý9IÖÆ×÷³§Ãâ·Ñ research and teaching institute; delivering high-quality patient care, as part of the Neuroscience Mission of the 9IÖÆ×÷³§Ãâ·Ñ Health Centre.ÌýWe areÌýproud to be a Killam Institution, supported by the Killam Trusts.

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