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Blomert, Leo; Mitterer, Holger; Paffen, Christiaan – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2004
There is a growing consensus that developmental dyslexia is associated with a phonological-core deficit. One symptom of this phonological deficit is a subtle speech-perception deficit. The auditory basis of this deficit is still hotly debated. If people with dyslexia, however, do not have an auditory deficit and perceive the underlying acoustic…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Mathematical Models, Auditory Perception, Dyslexia
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Munson, Benjamin; Edwards, Jan; Beckman, Mary E. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
A growing body of research has documented effects of phonotactic probability on young children's nonword repetition. This study extends this research in 2 ways. First, it compares nonword repetitions by 40 young children with phonological disorders with those by 40 same-age peers with typical phonological development on a nonword repetition task…
Descriptors: Probability, Young Children, Auditory Perception, Phonology
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Tuomainen, J.; Andersen, T.S.; Tiippana, K.; Sams, M. – Cognition, 2005
In face-to-face conversation speech is perceived by ear and eye. We studied the prerequisites of audio-visual speech perception by using perceptually ambiguous sine wave replicas of natural speech as auditory stimuli. When the subjects were not aware that the auditory stimuli were speech, they showed only negligible integration of auditory and…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli
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Mirman, D.; McClelland, J.L.; Holt, L.L. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2005
Previous studies have failed to demonstrate lexically induced delays in phoneme recognition, casting doubt on interactive models of speech perception. We present TRACE simulations that explain these failures: previously tested conditions failed to produce lexically induced delay effects because the input was too unambiguous and the control…
Descriptors: Prediction, Phonemes, Investigations, Competition
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Deutsch, Diana – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
The octave illusion (D. Deutsch, 1974) occurs when 2 tones separated by an octave are alternated repeatedly, such that when the right ear receives the high tone, the left ear receives the low tone, and vice versa. Most subjects in the original study reported hearing a single tone that alternated from ear to ear, whose pitch also alternated from…
Descriptors: Human Body, Auditory Perception, Hearing (Physiology)
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Thompson, Laura A.; Malmberg, Jeanne; Goodell, Neil K.; Boring, Ronald L. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2004
In 2 experiments, a novel experimental paradigm investigated how spatial attention is distributed across a talker's face during auditory-visual speech discourse processing. Dots were superimposed onto several talkers' faces for 17-msec durations on the talker's left side, mouth, right side, and eyebrow area. Participants reported the locations of…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Auditory Perception, Language Research
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Berg, Bruce G. – Psychological Review, 2004
Level-invariant detection refers to findings that thresholds in tone-in-noise detection are unaffected by roving-level procedures that degrade energy cues. Such data are inconsistent with ideas that detection is based on the energy passed by an auditory filter. A hypothesis that detection is based on a level-invariant temporal cue is advanced.…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Cues, Auditory Perception, Auditory Discrimination
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Gallagher, Patrick; Dagenbach, Dale – Brain and Cognition, 2007
Participants listened to the Asian disease problem framed in terms of either gains or losses and chose between two plans to combat the disease. All participants heard the problem embedded in other sounds; for some it was the relatively lower-frequency information, and for others it was the relatively higher-frequency information. The classic…
Descriptors: Diseases, Decision Making, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Disease Control
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Repp, Bruno H.; Knoblich, Gunther – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2007
Theories of agency--the feeling of being in control of one's actions and their effects--emphasize either perceptual or cognitive aspects. This study addresses both aspects simultaneously in a finger-tapping paradigm. The tasks required participants to detect when synchronization of their taps with computer-controlled tones changed to…
Descriptors: Cues, Psychophysiology, Auditory Perception, Self Control
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Makarova, Veronika – Language and Speech, 2007
This paper reports the results of an experimental phonetic study examining pitch peak alignment in production and perception of three-syllable one-word sentences with phonetic rising-falling pitch movement by speakers of Russian. The first part of the study (Experiment 1) utilizes 22 one-word three-syllable utterances read by five female speakers…
Descriptors: Sentences, Syllables, Phonetics, Auditory Perception
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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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Gifford, Rene H.; Bacon, Sid P.; Williams, Erica J. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2007
Purpose: To compare speech intelligibility in the presence of a 10-Hz square-wave noise masker in younger and older listeners and to relate performance to recovery from forward masking. Method: The signal-to-noise ratio required to achieve 50% sentence identification in the presence of a 10-Hz square-wave noise masker was obtained for each of the…
Descriptors: Sentences, Recognition (Psychology), Auditory Perception, Auditory Tests
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Berent, Iris; Steriade, Donca; Lennertz, Tracy; Vaknin, Vered – Cognition, 2007
Are speakers equipped with preferences concerning grammatical structures that are absent in their language? We examine this question by investigating the sensitivity of English speakers to the sonority of onset clusters. Linguistic research suggests that certain onset clusters are universally preferred (e.g., "bd" is greater than "lb"). We…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Language Research, Grammar, Russian
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Proctor, Robert W.; Yamaguchi, Motonori; Vu, Kim-Phuong L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2007
Four experiments examined transfer of noncorresponding spatial stimulus-response associations to an auditory Simon task for which stimulus location was irrelevant. Experiment 1 established that, for a horizontal auditory Simon task, transfer of spatial associations occurs after 300 trials of practice with an incompatible mapping of auditory …
Descriptors: Task Analysis, Auditory Stimuli, Auditory Perception, Spatial Ability
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Brown, Steven; Martinez, Michael J. – Brain and Cognition, 2007
Two same/different discrimination tasks were performed by amateur-musician subjects in this functional magnetic resonance imaging study: Melody Discrimination and Harmony Discrimination. Both tasks led to activations not only in classic working memory areas--such as the cingulate gyrus and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex--but in a series of…
Descriptors: Musicians, Listening Comprehension, Comparative Analysis, Brain
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