Search results for "Percept"

showing 10 items of 3839 documents

Harmony perception and regularity of spike trains in a simple auditory model

2013

A probabilistic approach for investigating the phenomena of dissonance and consonance in a simple auditory sensory model, composed by two sensory neurons and one interneuron, is presented. We calculated the interneuron’s firing statistics, that is the interspike interval statistics of the spike train at the output of the interneuron, for consonant and dissonant inputs in the presence of additional "noise", representing random signals from other, nearby neurons and from the environment. We find that blurry interspike interval distributions (ISIDs) characterize dissonant accords, while quite regular ISIDs characterize consonant accords. The informational entropy of the non-Markov spike train …

ConsonantInterneuronSpeech recognitionSpike trainmedia_common.quotation_subjectSensory systemConsonance and dissonanceSound perceptionSettore FIS/03 - Fisica Della Materiamedicine.anatomical_structureAuditory system consonant and dissonant accords environmental noise hidden Markov chain informational entropy regularityPerceptionmedicineAuditory systemMathematicsmedia_commonAIP Conference Proceedings
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Children's implicit knowledge of harmony in Western music.

2005

Three experiments examined children's knowledge of harmony in Western music. The children heard a series of chords followed by a final, target chord. In Experiment 1, French 6- and 11-year-olds judged whether the target was sung with the vowel /i/ or /u/. In Experiment 2, Australian 8- and 11-year-olds judged whether the target was played on a piano or a trumpet. In Experiment 3, Canadian 8- and 11-year-olds judged whether the target sounded good (i.e. consonant) or bad (dissonant). The target was either the most stable chord in the established musical key (i.e. the tonic, based on do, the first note of the scale) or a less stable chord. Performance was faster (Experiments 1, 2 and 3) and m…

ConsonantMaleCanadaCognitive NeuroscienceModels PsychologicalCognitionVowelDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansChildPitch PerceptionHarmony (color)Analysis of VarianceKnowledge levelPianoAustraliaConsonance and dissonanceSyntaxLinguisticsAuditory PerceptionChord (music)FemaleFrancePsychologyMusicCognitive psychologyPsychoacousticsDevelopmental science
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Auditory discrimination profiles of speech sound changes in 6-year-old children as determined with the multi-feature MMN paradigm.

2009

Objective: A linguistic multi-feature mismatch negativity (MMN) paradigm with five types of changes (vowel, vowel-duration, consonant, frequency (F0), and intensity) in Finnish syllables was used to determine speech-sound discrimination in 17 normally-developing 6-year-old children. The MMNs for vowel and vowel-duration were also recorded in an oddball condition in order to compare the two paradigms. Similar MMNs in the two paradigms would suggest that they tap the same processes. This would promote the usefulness of the more time-efficient multi-feature paradigm for future studies in children. Methods: MMNs to five deviant types were recorded in the multi-feature paradigm in which these de…

ConsonantMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAgingSpeech perceptionMismatch negativityAudiology050105 experimental psychologyPitch Discrimination03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSpeech discriminationCommunication disorderPhysiology (medical)VowelmedicineHumansLearning0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesLanguage disorderChildOddball paradigmFinlandLanguageCerebral CortexBrain MappingLanguage Tests05 social sciencesElectroencephalographymedicine.diseaseSensory SystemsMemory Short-TermNeurologyAcoustic StimulationSpeech PerceptionFemaleNeurology (clinical)Psychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical neurophysiology : official journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology
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Are Vowels and Consonants Processed Differently? Event-related Potential Evidence with a Delayed Letter Paradigm

2008

Abstract To investigate the neural bases of consonant and vowel processing, event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded while participants read words and pseudowords in a lexical decision task. The stimuli were displayed in three different conditions: (i) simultaneous presentation of all letters (baseline condition); (ii) presentation of all letters, except that two internal consonants were delayed for 50 msec (consonants-delayed condition); and (iii) presentation of all letters, except that two internal vowels were delayed for 50 msec (vowels-delayed condition). The behavioral results showed that, for words, response times in the consonants-delayed condition were longer than in the vowel…

ConsonantMalemedicine.medical_specialtyCognitive NeuroscienceAudiologyVocabularyYoung AdultDiscrimination PsychologicalEvent-related potentialVowelLexical decision taskmedicineReaction TimeHumansEvoked PotentialsBrain MappingNegativity effectElectroencephalographyLinguisticsN400ReadingWord recognitionSpeech PerceptionFemalePsychologyPhotic Stimulation
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Infants' brain responses for speech sound changes in fast multifeature MMN paradigm.

2013

Abstract Objective We investigated whether newborn speech-sound discrimination can be studied in 40min using fast multifeature mismatch negativity (MMN) paradigm and do the results differ from those obtained with the traditional oddball paradigm. Methods Newborns' MMN responses to five types of changes (consonant identity, F0, intensity, vowel duration and vowel identity) were recorded in the multifeature group ( N =15) and vowel duration and vowel identity changes in the oddball group ( N =13), after which the MMNs from both groups were compared with each others. Results Statistically significant MMNs in the 190–600ms time range from the stimulus onset were found for most change types in b…

ConsonantMalemedicine.medical_specialtyMismatch negativityStimulus (physiology)Audiologybehavioral disciplines and activities050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEvent-related potentialPhoneticsPhysiology (medical)VowelmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesTime rangeOddball paradigmSpeech sound05 social sciencesInfant NewbornBrainElectroencephalographySensory SystemsNeurologyAcoustic StimulationEvoked Potentials AuditorySpeech PerceptionFemaleNeurology (clinical)Psychologypsychological phenomena and processes030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical neurophysiology : official journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology
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Spike train statistics for consonant and dissonant musical accords in a simple auditory sensory model

2010

The phenomena of dissonance and consonance in a simple auditory sensory model composed of three neurons are considered. Two of them, here so-called sensory neurons, are driven by noise and subthreshold periodic signals with different ratio of frequencies, and its outputs plus noise are applied synaptically to a third neuron, so-called interneuron. We present a theoretical analysis with a probabilistic approach to investigate the interspike intervals statistics of the spike train generated by the interneuron. We find that tones with frequency ratios that are considered consonant by musicians produce at the third neuron inter-firing intervals statistics densities that are very distinctive fro…

ConsonantNoise in the nervous system; Analytical theories; Sensor auditory systemStochastic ProcessesQuantitative Biology::Neurons and CognitionInterneuronSensory Receptor CellsSpike trainProbabilistic logicSensor auditory systemSensory systemNoise in the nervous systemConsonance and dissonanceModels BiologicalSettore FIS/03 - Fisica Della MateriaNoiseAnalytical theoriemedicine.anatomical_structureNonlinear DynamicsComputer Science::SoundStatisticsmedicineAuditory PerceptionSpike (software development)MathematicsProbability
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Does conal prime CANAL more than cinal? Masked phonological priming effects in Spanish with the lexical decision task.

2005

Evidence for an early involvement of phonology in word identification usually relies on the comparison between a target word preceded by a homophonic prime and an orthographic control (rait-RATE vs. raut-RATE). This comparison rests on the assumption that the two control primes are equally orthographically similar to the target. Here, we tested for phonological effects with a masked priming paradigm in which orthographic similarity between priming conditions was perfectly controlled at the letter level and in which identification of the prime was virtually at chance for both stimulus onset asynchronies (SOAs) (66 and 50 msec). In the key prime-target pairs, each prime differed from the targ…

ConsonantResponse primingDecision MakingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyStimulus onset asynchronyPhonologyVocabularyLinguisticsSemanticsWord lists by frequencyNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)PhoneticsSpainVowelLexical decision taskReaction TimeHumansPsychologyPriming (psychology)Perceptual MaskingCognitive psychologyMemorycognition
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Attention effects on the processing of task-relevant and task-irrelevant speech sounds and letters

2013

We used event-related brain potentials (ERPs) to study effects of selective attention on the processing of attended and unattended spoken syllables and letters. Participants were presented with syllables randomly occurring in the left or right ear and spoken by different voices and with a concurrent foveal stream of consonant letters written in darker or lighter fonts. During auditory phonological and non-phonological tasks, they responded to syllables in a designated ear starting with a vowel and spoken by female voices, respectively. These syllables occurred infrequently among standard syllables starting with a consonant and spoken by male voices. During visual phonological and non-phonol…

ConsonantSelective auditory attentionmedicine.medical_specialtyVisual perception515 PsychologyspeechSpeech recognitioneducationauditionElectroencephalographyAudiology050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-571Task (project management)03 medical and health sciencesevent-related potential0302 clinical medicineEvent-related potentialFovealVowelmedicinePsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesOriginal Research ArticleEEGlcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatrymedicine.diagnostic_testGeneral Neuroscience05 social sciencessuppressionattentionPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFrontiers in Neuroscience
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Syllable onsets are perceptual reading units

2007

Syllable onsets are defined as the initial consonant or consonant cluster in a syllable (e.g., BR in BREAD). In the present study, using a letter detection paradigm and French words, we tested whether syllable onsets are processed as units by the reading system. In Experiment 1, we replicated Gross, Treiman, and Inman's (2000) result of observing no difference between the detection latencies of letters embedded in a multi-letter syllable onset (e.g., c in ECLATER) relative to a single-letter syllable onset (e.g., C in ECARTER). In Experiment 2, participants took longer to detect the target letter when it was in the second position of a multi-letter onset (e.g., L in TABLIER) than when it wa…

ConsonantSpeech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectLateral maskingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyPosition dependentVocabularyLinguisticsNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)ReadingPhoneticsPerceptionReading (process)[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyReaction TimeHumansSyllablePsychologyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSmedia_commonConsonant cluster
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Further Investigation of Harmonic Priming in Long Contexts Using Musical Timbre as Surface Marker to Control for Temporal Effects

2004

Harmonic priming studies have reported facilitated processing for chords that are harmonically related to the prime context. Responses to the target (the last chord of an 8-chord sequence) were faster and more accurate when the target was strongly related, i.e., a tonic chord, to the preceding prime context than when it was less related, i.e., a subdominant chord. Results have been interpreted in terms of musical expectations and processing speed: the prime allows listeners to develop expectations for future events which lead to facilitated processing of the most strongly expected event. The present experiment investigated an alternative hypothesis suggesting that the harmonic structure of…

ConsonantSubdominantTime Factorsmedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyMusical050105 experimental psychologyJudgmentRandom Allocation03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSurveys and QuestionnairesReaction TimeHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPitch Perceptionmedia_commonCommunicationbusiness.industry05 social sciences030229 sport sciencesConsonance and dissonanceAmbiguitySensory SystemsChord (music)PsychologybusinessTimbrePriming (psychology)MusicCognitive psychologyPerceptual and Motor Skills
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