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Showing 316 to 330 of 522 results Save | Export
Mefferd, Roy B., Jr.; And Others – Percept Mot Skills, 1970
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Auditory Perception, Clinics, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Deutsch, Diana; Feroe, John – Psychological Review, 1981
A model for the internal representation of pitch sequences in tonal music is advanced. Pitch sequences are retained as hierarchical networks. At each level, elements are organized as structural units, in accordance with laws of figural goodness. Processing advantages of the system are discussed. (Author/BW)
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Jerger, Susan; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1993
An auditory Stroop task was administered to 20 children with hearing impairment (ages 3-10) and 60 normal-hearing children. Results suggest that the voice-gender and semantic dimensions of speech were not processed independently by children with or without hearing loss. Speech processing by children with hearing impairment was carried out in a…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Cognitive Processes, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Yap, Regina L.; van der Leij, Aryan – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1994
Fourteen Dutch children with dyslexia were compared with controls on automatic processing under a dual task (motor balance task and auditory choice task) model. Results indicated the dyslexic group was more impaired in the dual task condition than in the single task condition, compared with controls. Findings support the automatization deficit…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, Dyslexia, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Jutras, Benoit; Gagne, Jean-Pierre – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1999
Forty-eight children, either with or without a sensorineural hearing loss and either young (6 and 7 years old) or older (9 and 10 years old) reproduced sequences of acoustic stimuli that varied in number, temporal spacing, and type. Results suggested that the poorer performance of the hearing-impaired children was due to auditory processing…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Auditory Perception, Children, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rigo, Thomas G.; Arehole, Shalini; Hayes, Phebe A. – Journal of Secondary Gifted Education, 1998
The central auditory processing (CAP) abilities of 52 low-achieving gifted high school students were measured and compared to matching groups of achieving gifted students, average students, and students with learning disabilities. Results indicated significant CAP deficits in the low-achieving gifted group that were similar to those of the…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, Gifted, High Schools
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Kovacs, Stacie L.; Newcombe, Nora S. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2006
Adults' source judgments are more accurate when they focus on speakers' emotions than when adults focus on their own emotions. Focusing on speakers may lead to better source memory because it encourages processing of the perceptual characteristics of the source and binding of that information to the content of what is being said. The purpose of…
Descriptors: Memory, Young Children, Experiments, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Hattiangadi, Nina; Pillion, Joseph P.; Slomine, Beth; Christensen, James; Trovato, Melissa K.; Speedie, Lynn J. – Brain and Language, 2005
We present a case that is unusual in many respects from other documented incidences of auditory agnosia, including the mechanism of injury, age of the individual, and location of neurological insult. The clinical presentation is one of disturbance in the perception of spoken language, music, pitch, emotional prosody, and temporal auditory…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Auditory Perception, Case Studies, Children
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Jarvinen-Pasley, Anna; Heaton, Pamela – Developmental Science, 2007
Neurological and behavioral findings indicate that atypical auditory processing characterizes autism. The present study tested the hypothesis that auditory processing is less domain-specific in autism than in typical development. Participants with autism and controls completed a pitch sequence discrimination task in which same/different judgments…
Descriptors: Cues, Autism, Attention, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Kraljic, Tanya; Samuel, Arthur G. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2007
Different speakers may pronounce the same sounds very differently, yet listeners have little difficulty perceiving speech accurately. Recent research suggests that listeners adjust their preexisting phonemic categories to accommodate speakers' pronunciations ("perceptual learning"). In some cases, these adjustments appear to reflect general…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Auditory Perception, Phonemes, Cognitive Style
Yates, Jack; And Others – 1982
A shadowing paradigm was used to determine the extent to which subjects could comprehend a spoken message without allocating attention or awareness to it. The paradigm involved presenting subjects with a control passage describing neutral events and an experimental passage describing embarrassing events over an unattended auditory channel.…
Descriptors: Attention, Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, College Students
Day, Ruth S. – 1977
Individual differences in dichotic fusion experiments could be based on a number of different principles. The current working hypothesis suggests that the phenomenon reflects a language-binding effect; language-bound (LB) individuals perceive and remember events in language terms while language-optional (LO) individuals can use language structures…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, College Students
Wolff, Peter – 1971
Recent theories of verbal memory have hypothesized that memory for a stimulus is not represented by a unitary memory trace, but rather by a coding on several attributes of the event. The present experiment tested the differential forgetting hypothesis in a unique way. Words were presented either visually (V) or auditorally (A) in a continuous…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, Memorization, Memory
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Reed, Charlotte – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1975
Descriptors: Adults, Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, Exceptional Child Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Keren, Gideon; And Others – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1977
Research by Posner and Mitchell (1967) was used to investigate levels of noise processing in testing subjects' ability to "gate out" the processing of irrelevant and unwanted material. Three experiments are reported in which subjects had to judge whether two letters were the "same" or "different". Noise elements were included to test attention…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, Experimental Psychology
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