This volume is a summary and synthesis of the current state of  auditory forebrain organization. It addresses a clinical and academic  research area that has experienced substantial progress in understanding  the contribution of the auditory forebrain (that is, the medial  geniculate body, the auditory cortex, and limbic-related structures) to  hearing, sound localization, communication, emotive behavior, and  cognition. While much of this work has been summarized in brief review  form, a more synoptic and integrative treatment has been needed. 
The  Auditory Cortex looks back on 100 years of the discipline of  auditory forebrain studies with a view to framing a future agenda. As  new methods emerge and as older approaches exhaust their potential, it  provides a summing up of the field and forges a prospectus for future  work. The goal of this volume is to provide an experimental foundation  and a conceptual framework for the auditory forebrain useful to the  discipline as a whole, which one might consult as both a summary of work  in progress and an invitation to explore further. 
The  Auditory Cortex is a timely contribution in view of the growing  interest in this network as the arbiter for hearing, and as a key  element in the larger communications network that spans and links the  parietal, temporal, and frontal cortices. It provides an introduction to  the auditory forebrain and to the neural basis of central auditory  processing for neuroscientists, psychologists, clinicians,  otolaryngologists, and graduate and postgraduate research workers in the  field of sensory and sensory-motor systems. 
About the Editors:
Dr.  Jeffery A. Winer was a Professor of Neurobiology in the Department of  Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of California at Berkeley.  He used structural studies of the central auditory pathway as a model  system to address significant neurobiological questions about neural  circuitry in a functional context. The comparative, structural, and  functional accessibility of the central auditory pathway provided him  with a powerful system in which to pursue functional questions in the  context of systems neuroscience. 
Dr. Christoph E. Schreiner is  Professor and Vice-Chair in the Department of Otolaryngology--Head and  Neck Surgery and a Member of the W.M. Keck Foundation Center for  Integrative Neuroscience and the Coleman Memorial Laboratory at the  University of California at San Francisco. His main scientific interests  are centered around the processing of complex sounds in the auditory  midbrain, thalamus, and cortex.
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