PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Audrey R. Nath AU - Eswen E. Fava AU - Michael S. Beauchamp TI - Neural Correlates of Interindividual Differences in Children's Audiovisual Speech Perception AID - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2605-11.2011 DP - 2011 Sep 28 TA - The Journal of Neuroscience PG - 13963--13971 VI - 31 IP - 39 4099 - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/31/39/13963.short 4100 - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/31/39/13963.full SO - J. Neurosci.2011 Sep 28; 31 AB - Children use information from both the auditory and visual modalities to aid in understanding speech. A dramatic illustration of this multisensory integration is the McGurk effect, an illusion in which an auditory syllable is perceived differently when it is paired with an incongruent mouth movement. However, there are significant interindividual differences in McGurk perception: some children never perceive the illusion, while others always do. Because converging evidence suggests that the posterior superior temporal sulcus (STS) is a critical site for multisensory integration, we hypothesized that activity within the STS would predict susceptibility to the McGurk effect. To test this idea, we used BOLD fMRI in 17 children aged 6–12 years to measure brain responses to the following three audiovisual stimulus categories: McGurk incongruent, non-McGurk incongruent, and congruent syllables. Two separate analysis approaches, one using independent functional localizers and another using whole-brain voxel-based regression, showed differences in the left STS between perceivers and nonperceivers. The STS of McGurk perceivers responded significantly more than that of nonperceivers to McGurk syllables, but not to other stimuli, and perceivers' hemodynamic responses in the STS were significantly prolonged. In addition to the STS, weaker differences between perceivers and nonperceivers were observed in the fusiform face area and extrastriate visual cortex. These results suggest that the STS is an important source of interindividual variability in children's audiovisual speech perception.