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Dive into the research topics where Joy Hirsch is active.

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Featured researches published by Joy Hirsch.


Nature | 1997

Distinct cortical areas associated with native and second languages

Karl H. S. Kim; Norman Relkin; Kyoung Min Lee; Joy Hirsch

The ability to acquire and use several languages selectively is a unique and essential human capacity. Here we investigate the fundamental question of how multiple languages are represented in a human brain. We applied functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to determine the spatial relationship between native and second languages in the human cortex, and show that within the frontal-lobe language-sensitive regions (Brocas area), second languages acquired in adulthood (‘late’ bilingual subjects) are spatially separated from native languages. However, when acquired during the early language acquisition stage of development (‘early’ bilingual subjects), native and second languages tend to be represented in common frontal cortical areas. In both late and early bilingual subjects, the temporal-lobe language-sensitive regions (Wernickes area) also show effectively little or no separation of activity based on the age of language acquisition. This discovery of language-specific regions in Brocas area advances our understanding of the cortical representation that underlies multiple language functions.


Neurosurgery | 2000

An Integrated Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Procedure for Preoperative Mapping of Cortical Areas Associated with Tactile, Motor, Language, and Visual Functions

Joy Hirsch; Maximilian I. Ruge; Karl H. S. Kim; Denise D. Correa; Jonathan D. Victor; Norman Relkin; Douglas Labar; George Krol; Mark H. Bilsky; Mark M. Souweidane; Lisa M. DeAngelis; Philip H. Gutin

OBJECTIVETo evaluate an integrated battery of preoperative functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) tasks developed to identify cortical areas associated with tactile, motor, language, and visual functions. METHODSSensitivity of each task was determined by the probability that a targeted region was activated for both healthy volunteers (n = 63) and surgical patients with lesions in these critical areas (n = 125). Accuracy of each task was determined by the correspondence between the fMRI maps and intraoperative electrophysiological measurements, including somatosensory evoked potentials (n = 16), direct cortical stimulation (n = 9), and language mapping (n = 5), and by preoperative Wada tests (n = 13) and visual field examinations (n = 6). RESULTSFor healthy volunteers, the overall sensitivity was 100% for identification of the central sulcus, visual cortex, and putative Wernicke’s area, and 93% for the putative Broca’s area (dominant hemisphere). For patients with tumors affecting these regions of interest, task sensitivity was 97% for identification of the central sulcus, 100% for the visual cortex, 91% for the putative Wernicke’s area, and 77% for the putative Broca’s area. These sensitivities were enhanced by the use of multiple tasks to target related functions. Concordance of the fMRI maps and intraoperative electrophysiological measurements was observed whenever both techniques yielded maps and Wada and visual field examinations were consistent with fMRI results. CONCLUSIONThis integrated fMRI task battery offers standardized and noninvasive preoperative maps of multiple critical functions to facilitate assessment of surgical risk, planning of surgical routes, and direction of conventional, intraoperative electrophysiological procedures. Thus, a greater range of structural and functional relationships is brought to bear in the service of optimal outcomes for neurosurgery.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2003

fMRI Evidence for Cortical Modification during Learning of Mandarin Lexical Tone

Yue Wang; Joan A. Sereno; Allard Jongman; Joy Hirsch

Functional magnetic resonance imaging was employed before and after six native English speakers completed lexical tone training as part of a program to learn Mandarin as a second language. Language-related areas including Brocas area, Wernickes area, auditory cortex, and supplementary motor regions were active in all subjects before and after training and did not vary in average location. Across all subjects, improvements in performance were associated with an increase in the spatial extent of activation in left superior temporal gyrus (Brodmanns area 22, putative Wernickes area), the emergence of activity in adjacent Brodmanns area 42, and the emergence of activity in right inferior frontal gyrus (Brodmanns area 44), a homologue of putative Brocas area. These findings demonstrate a form of enrichment plasticity in which the early cortical effects of learning a tone-based second language involve both expansion of preexisting language-related areas and recruitment of additional cortical regions specialized for functions similar to the new language functions.


NeuroImage | 1997

Fast and Localized Event-Related Optical Signals (EROS) in the Human Occipital Cortex: Comparisons with the Visual Evoked Potential and fMRI ☆

Gabriele Gratton; Monica Fabiani; Paul M. Corballis; Donald C. Hood; Marsha Ruth Goodman-Wood; Joy Hirsch; Karl H. S. Kim; David Friedman; Enrico Gratton

Localized evoked activity of the human cortex produces fast changes in optical properties that can be detected noninvasively (event-related optical signal, or EROS). In the present study a fast EROS response (latency approximately 100 ms) elicited in the occipital cortex by visual stimuli showed spatial congruence with fMRI signals and temporal correspondence with VEPs, thus combining subcentimeter spatial localization with subsecond temporal resolution. fMRI signals were recorded from striate and extrastriate cortex. Both areas showed EROS peaks, but at different latencies after stimulation (100 and 200-300 ms, respectively). These results suggest that EROS manifests localized neuronal activity associated with information processing. The temporal resolution and spatial localization of this signal make it a promising tool for studying the time course of activity in localized brain areas and for bridging the gap between electrical and hemodynamic imaging methods.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2001

Interconnected Large-Scale Systems for Three Fundamental Cognitive Tasks Revealed by Functional MRI

Joy Hirsch; Diana Rodriguez Moreno; Karl H. S. Kim

The specific brain areas required to execute each of three fundamental cognitive tasks-objects naming, same-different discrimination, and integer computation-are determined by whole-brain functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) using a novel techinque sptimized for the isolation of neurocognitive systems. This technique (1) conjoins the activity associated with identical or nearly identical tasks performed in multiple sensory modalities (conjunction) and (2) isolates the activity conserved across multiple subjects (conservation). Cortical regions isolated by this technique are, thus, presumedassociated with cognitive functions that are both distinguished from primary sensory processes and from individual differences. The object-naming system consisted of four brain areas: left inferior frontal gyrus, Brodmanns areas (BAs) 45 and 44; left superior temporal gyrus, BA 22; and left medical frontal gyrus, BA 6. The same-different discrimination system consisted for three brain areas: right inferior parietal labule, BA 40; right precentral gyrus, BA 6; and left medial frontal gyrus, BA 6. The integer computation system consisted of five brain area: right middle frontal gyrus, BA 6; right preecentral gyrus, BA 6; left inferior parietal lobule, BA 40; left inferior frontal gyrus, BA 44; and left medial frontal gyrus, BA 6. All three neurocognitive systems shared one common cortical region, the left medial frontal gyrus, the object-naming and integer computation systems shared the left inferior frontal gyrus, and the integer computation and same-different dicrimination systems shared the right precetral gyrus. These results are consistent with connectionist models of cognitive processes where specific sets of remote brain areas are assumed to be transiently bound together as functional units to enable these functions, and further suggest a superorganization of neurocognitive systems where single brain areas serve as elemets of multiple functional systems.


Neuroreport | 1998

Representation of nociceptive stimuli in primary sensory cortex.

Howard H. Berman; Karl H. S. Kim; Ardesheer Talati; Joy Hirsch

USING fMRI, we observed cortical activity associated with nociceptive hot and cold sensations applied to hand and foot that are not spatially restricted to the corresponding regions of the primary somatosensory cortex (SI). Hot (55–57°C) and cold (0–2°C) tactile stimuli were applied separately to the right hand and foot of eight right-handed subjects. Although somatotopic mapping of hand and foot was observed as expected based on the Penfield homunculus, activations associated with hot during both hand and foot stimulation and subsequently, cold, activated regions unique to each thermal modality irrespective of the body part. This distributed system for thermal information is present at both nociceptive and more neutral thermal intensities (i.e. warm and cool sensations) indicating the presence of distributed sensory processing associated with thermal-related sensations in human primary sensorimotor cortex.


Perceptual and Motor Skills | 1997

PERCEPTION OF A BORDER DEFINED BY RAPIDLY REVERSING LUMINANCE CONTRAST

Kyoung‐Min Lee; Joy Hirsch

We report a new visual illusion of a perceptual boundary visible between two contiguous regions of equal luminance when the intensity is modulated with a temporal frequency that is higher than the critical fusion rate. Measurements of the luminance threshold of the perceptual border with various slopes of the luminance gradient yielded a function suggestive of the range of ocular instability. These findings raise the possibility that this new border illusion may be influenced by involuntary ocular motion during fixation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1995

ILLUSORY CONTOURS ACTIVATE SPECIFIC REGIONS IN HUMAN VISUAL CORTEX : EVIDENCE FROM FUNCTIONAL MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING

Joy Hirsch; Robert L. DeLaPaz; Norman Relkin; Jonathan D. Victor; Karl H. S. Kim; Tao Li; Peter Borden; Nava Rubin; Robert Shapley


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2005

Discordance between functional magnetic resonance imaging during silent speech tasks and intraoperative speech arrest

Nicole M. Petrovich; Andrei I. Holodny; Viviane Tabar; Denise D. Correa; Joy Hirsch; Philip H. Gutin; Cameron Brennan


Nature | 1982

Falcon visual sensitivity to grating contrast

Joy Hirsch

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Karl H. S. Kim

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Robert Shapley

Center for Neural Science

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David Friedman

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Denise D. Correa

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Kyoung‐Min Lee

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Nava Rubin

Center for Neural Science

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Philip H. Gutin

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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