Abstract
This manuscript reviews evidence from neuroimaging studies on elementary processes of speech perception and their implications for our understanding of the brain-speech relationship. Essentially, differential preferences of the left and right auditory-related cortex for rapidly and slowly changing acoustic cues that constitute (sub)segmental and suprasegmental parameters, e. g. phonemes, prosody, and rhythm. The adopted parameter-based research approach takes the early stages of speech perception as being of fundamental relevance for simple as well as complex language functions. The current state of knowledge necessitates an extensive revision of the classical neurologically oriented model of language processing that was aimed at identifying the neural correlates of linguistic components (e. g. phonology, syntax and semantics) more than at substantiating the importance of (supra)segmental information during speech perception.