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Chen, Zhaocong; Liu, Peng; Wang, Emily Q.; Larson, Charles R.; Huang, Dongfeng; Liu, Hanjun – Brain and Language, 2012
The present study investigated whether the neural correlates for auditory feedback control of vocal pitch can be shaped by tone language experience. Event-related potentials (P2/N1) were recorded from adult native speakers of Mandarin and Cantonese who heard their voice auditory feedback shifted in pitch by -50, -100, -200, or -500 cents when they…
Descriptors: Diagnostic Tests, Tone Languages, Adults, Vowels
Veispak, Anneli; Boets, Bart; Mannamaa, Mairi; Ghesquiere, Pol – Research in Developmental Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2012
Similar to many sighted children who struggle with learning to read, a proportion of blind children have specific difficulties related to reading braille which cannot be easily explained. A lot of research has been conducted to investigate the perceptual and cognitive processes behind (impairments in) print reading. Very few studies, however, have…
Descriptors: Blindness, Braille, Reading Achievement, Familiarity
Chan, Alice Y. W. – Modern Language Journal, 2012
This article reports on the results of a research study that investigated Cantonese English as a second language (ESL) learners' perception of English speech sounds, their perceived relations between "similar" English and Cantonese sounds, as well as the applicability of the claims of the Speech Learning Model (SLM) to second language…
Descriptors: Phonology, Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
Mahler, Leslie A.; Ramig, Lorraine O. – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2012
This study investigated the impact of a well-defined behavioral dysarthria treatment on acoustic and perceptual measures of speech in four adults with dysarthria secondary to stroke. A single-subject A-B-A experimental design was used to measure the effects of the Lee Silverman Voice Treatment (LSVT[R]LOUD) on the speech of individual…
Descriptors: Vowels, Speech Impairments, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Neurological Impairments
Ambrose, Sophie E.; Fey, Marc E.; Eisenberg, Laurie S. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2012
Purpose: To determine whether preschool-age children with cochlear implants have age-appropriate phonological awareness and print knowledge and to examine the relationships of these skills with related speech and language abilities. Method: The sample comprised 24 children with cochlear implants (CIs) and 23 peers with normal hearing (NH), ages 36…
Descriptors: Assistive Technology, Language Acquisition, Emergent Literacy, Phonological Awareness
Righi, Giulia – ProQuest LLC, 2010
The goal of this dissertation is to examine how brain regions respond to different types of competition during word comprehension and word production. I will present three studies that attempt to enhance the current understanding of which brain regions are sensitive to different aspects of competition and how the nature of the stimuli and the…
Descriptors: Brain, Neurological Organization, Language Processing, Auditory Perception
Clark, Catherine – PEPNet-Northeast, 2010
This version of "Serving Deaf Students Who Have Cochlear Implants. PEPNet Tipsheet," written in Spanish, describes how cochlear implants (CIs) work. CIs are complex electronic devices surgically implanted under the skin behind the ear. These devices utilize electrodes placed in the inner ear (the cochlea) to stimulate the auditory nerve of…
Descriptors: Assistive Technology, Hearing Impairments, Surgery, Deafness
Knudsen, Daniel P.; Gentner, Timothy Q. – Brain and Language, 2010
Songbirds share a number of parallels with humans that make them an attractive model system for studying the behavioral and neurobiological mechanisms that underlie the learning and processing of vocal communication signals. Here we review the perceptual and cognitive mechanisms of audition in birds, and emphasize the behavioral and neural basis…
Descriptors: Singing, Auditory Perception, Animals, Learning Processes
Pepperberg, Irene M. – Brain and Language, 2010
This chapter briefly reviews what is known-and what remains to be understood--about Grey parrot vocal learning. I review Greys' physical capacities--issues of auditory perception and production--then discuss how these capacities are used in vocal learning and can be recruited for referential communication with humans. I discuss cross-species…
Descriptors: Infants, Auditory Perception, Brain, Animals
Williamson, Rebecca A.; Jaswal, Vikram K.; Meltzoff, Andrew N. – Developmental Psychology, 2010
Two experiments were used to investigate the scope of imitation by testing whether 36-month-olds can learn to produce a categorization strategy through observation. After witnessing an adult sort a set of objects by a visible property (their color; Experiment 1) or a nonvisible property (the particular sounds produced when the objects were shaken;…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Observation, Classification, Auditory Perception
Ocklenburg, Sebastian; Hirnstein, Marco; Hausmann, Markus; Lewald, Jorg – Brain and Cognition, 2010
Several studies have shown that handedness has an impact on visual spatial abilities. Here we investigated the effect of laterality on auditory space perception. Participants (33 right-handers, 20 left-handers) completed two tasks of sound localization. In a dark, anechoic, and sound-proof room, sound stimuli (broadband noise) were presented via…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Handedness, Lateral Dominance, Auditory Perception
Jovicic, Slobodan T.; Kasic, Zorca; Punisic, Silvana – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2010
The purpose of the present study was to investigate (a) the distortion in production of word-initial friction duration in fricative /[esh]/, and (b) the perceptual discrimination between typical (normal) and atypical (prolonged or lengthened) friction duration. In the first experiment 80 school aged children pronounced word /[esh]uma/, 40 of them…
Descriptors: Speech Language Pathology, Auditory Perception, Stimuli, Articulation (Speech)
Cutler, Anne; Treiman, Rebecca; van Ooijen, Brit – Language and Speech, 2010
The phoneme detection task is widely used in spoken-word recognition research. Alphabetically literate participants, however, are more used to explicit representations of letters than of phonemes. The present study explored whether phoneme detection is sensitive to how target phonemes are, or may be, orthographically realized. Listeners detected…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Word Recognition, Spelling, Orthographic Symbols
Roberts, Katherine L.; Summerfield, A. Quentin; Hall, Deborah A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
The spatial relevance hypothesis (J. J. McDonald & L. M. Ward, 1999) proposes that covert auditory spatial orienting can only be beneficial to auditory processing when task stimuli are encoded spatially. We present a series of experiments that evaluate 2 key aspects of the hypothesis: (a) that "reflexive activation of location-sensitive neurons is…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Auditory Perception, Cues, Stimuli
Yoshida, Katherine A.; Fennell, Christopher T.; Swingley, Daniel; Werker, Janet F. – Developmental Science, 2009
Can infants, in the very first stages of word learning, use their perceptual sensitivity to the phonetics of speech while learning words? Research to date suggests that infants of 14 months cannot learn two similar-sounding words unless there is substantial contextual support. The current experiment advances our understanding of this failure by…
Descriptors: Infants, Vocabulary Development, Auditory Perception, Phonetics

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