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Houston, Derek M.; Horn, David L.; Qi, Rong; Ting, Jonathan Y.; Gao, Sujuan – Infancy, 2007
Assessing speech discrimination skills in individual infants from clinical populations (e.g., infants with hearing impairment) has important diagnostic value. However, most infant speech discrimination paradigms have been designed to test group effects rather than individual differences. Other procedures suffer from high attrition rates. In this…
Descriptors: Infants, Auditory Discrimination, Comparative Analysis, Auditory Stimuli
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Leibold, Lori J.; Werner, Lynne A. – Infancy, 2007
It has been suggested that infants respond preferentially to infant-directed speech because their auditory sensitivity to sounds with extensive frequency modulation (FM) is better than their sensitivity to less modulated sounds. In this experiment, auditory thresholds for FM tones and for unmodulated, or pure, tones in a background of noise were…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Infants, Auditory Stimuli, Responses
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Newman, Rochelle S.; Hussain, Isma – Infancy, 2006
Although a large literature discusses infants' preference for infant-directed speech (IDS), few studies have examined how this preference might change over time or across listening situations. The work reported here compares infants' preference for IDS while listening in a quiet versus a noisy environment, and across 3 points in development: 4.5…
Descriptors: Infants, Speech, Listening, Auditory Stimuli