Search results for "speech"

showing 10 items of 1281 documents

Common variance in amplitude envelope perception tasks and their impact on phoneme duration perception and reading and spelling in Finnish children w…

2009

ABSTRACTOur goal was to investigate auditory and speech perception abilities of children with and without reading disability (RD) and associations between auditory, speech perception, reading, and spelling skills. Participants were 9-year-old, Finnish-speaking children with RD (N = 30) and typically reading children (N = 30). Results showed significant group differences between the groups in phoneme duration discrimination but not in perception of amplitude modulation and rise time. Correlations among rise time discrimination, phoneme duration, and spelling accuracy were found for children with RD. Those children with poor rise time discrimination were also poor in phoneme duration discrimi…

Auditory perceptionLinguistics and Languagemedicine.medical_specialtyReading disabilitySpeech perceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectDyslexiaExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyPhonologyAudiologymedicine.diseaseLanguage and LinguisticsSpellingLinguisticsReading (process)PerceptionmedicinePsychologyGeneral Psychologymedia_commonApplied Psycholinguistics
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Audiovisual speech perception in children with developmental language disorder in degraded listening conditions.

2013

Purpose The effect of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) on the perception of audiovisual speech in children with and without developmental language disorder (DLD) was investigated by varying the noise level and the sound intensity of acoustic speech. The main hypotheses were that the McGurk effect (in which incongruent visual speech alters the auditory speech percept) would be weaker for children with DLD than for controls and that it would get stronger with decreasing SNR in both groups. Method The participants were 8-year-old children with DLD and a sample of children with normal language development. In the McGurk stimuli, the consonant uttered by the voice differed from that articulated …

Auditory perceptionMaleLinguistics and LanguageVisual perceptionSpeech perceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectLoudness PerceptionLipreadingSpecific language impairmentSignal-To-Noise Ratio050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and Linguistics03 medical and health sciencesSpeech and Hearing0302 clinical medicinePhoneticsPerceptionmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesLanguage Development DisordersChildmedia_commonCued speechMotor theory of speech perceptionLanguage Tests05 social sciencesmedicine.diseaseAcoustic StimulationSpeech Discrimination TestsSpeech PerceptionMcGurk effectFemalePsychologyNoise030217 neurology & neurosurgeryChild LanguagePhotic StimulationCognitive psychologyJournal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR
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Auditory, speech and language development in young children with cochlear implants compared with children with normal hearing.

2010

Abstract Objective This study had two aims: (1) to document the auditory and lexical development of children who are deaf and received the first cochlear implant (CI) by the age of 16 months and the second CI by the age of 31 months and (2) to compare these children's results with those of children with normal hearing (NH). Methods This longitudinal study included five children with NH and five with sensorineural deafness. All children of the second group were observed for 36 months after the first fitting of the device (cochlear implant). The auditory development of the CI group was documented every 3 months up to the age of two years in hearing age and chronological age and for the NH gro…

Auditory perceptionMalemedicine.medical_specialtyLongitudinal studymedicine.medical_treatmentSensorineural deafnessAudiologyDeafnessDiagnostic toolsLanguage DevelopmentCochlear implantSurveys and Questionnairesotorhinolaryngologic diseasesMedicineHumansSpeechLongitudinal Studiesbusiness.industryInfantGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseLanguage developmentCochlear ImplantsOtorhinolaryngologySpeech developmentChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthAuditory PerceptionSensorineural hearing lossFemalebusinessInternational journal of pediatric otorhinolaryngology
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Event-related brain potentials to change in the frequency and temporal structure of sounds in typically developing 5-6-year-old children.

2015

The brain's ability to recognize different acoustic cues (e.g., frequency changes in rapid temporal succession) is important for speech perception and thus for successful language development. Here we report on distinct event-related potentials (ERPs) in 5-6-year-old children recorded in a passive oddball paradigm to repeated tone pair stimuli with a frequency change in the second tone in the pair, replicating earlier findings. An occasional insertion of a third tone within the tone pair generated a more merged pattern, which has not been reported previously in 5-6-year-old children. Both types of deviations elicited pre-attentive discriminative mismatch negativity (MMN) and late discrimina…

Auditory perceptionMalemedicine.medical_specialtySpeech perceptionlate discriminative negativity (LDN)Mismatch negativityContingent Negative VariationElectroencephalographyAudiologyta3112behavioral disciplines and activitiesBrain mappingTone (musical instrument)Physiology (medical)medicineReaction TimeHumansEEGChildOddball paradigmta515auditory processingCommunicationAnalysis of VarianceBrain Mappingmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceBrainElectroencephalographyT-complexmismatch negativity (MMN)Contingent negative variationNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologySoundAcoustic StimulationChild PreschoolAuditory PerceptionEvoked Potentials AuditoryFemalePsychologybusinessN250psychological phenomena and processesInternational journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology
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2013

To identify factors limiting performance in multitone intensity discrimination, we presented sequences of five pure tones alternating in level between loud (85 dB SPL) and soft (30, 55, or 80 dB SPL). In the “overall-intensity task”, listeners detected a level increment on all of the five tones. In the “masking task”, the level increment was imposed only on the soft tones, rendering the soft tones targets and loud tones task-irrelevant maskers. Decision weights quantifying the importance of the five tone levels for the decision were estimated using methods of molecular psychophysics. Compatible with previous studies, listeners placed higher weights on the loud tones than on the soft tones i…

Auditory perceptionMultidisciplinaryStimulus modalityNoise reductionSpeech recognitionQUIETPsychophysicsPerceptual MaskingSound pressureMathematicsOptimal decisionPLOS ONE
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Categorization of Extremely Brief Auditory Stimuli: Domain-Specific or Domain-General Processes?

2011

The present study investigated the minimum amount of auditory stimulation that allows differentiation of spoken voices, instrumental music, and environmental sounds. Three new findings were reported. 1) All stimuli were categorized above chance level with 50 ms-segments. 2) When a peak-level normalization was applied, music and voices started to be accurately categorized with 20 ms-segments. When the root-mean-square (RMS) energy of the stimuli was equalized, voice stimuli were better recognized than music and environmental sounds. 3) Further psychoacoustical analyses suggest that the categorization of extremely brief auditory stimuli depends on the variability of their spectral envelope in…

Auditory perceptionNormalization (statistics)Property (programming)Experimental psychologySpeech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:MedicineBiologySocial and Behavioral SciencesPerceptionPsychophysicsPsychologyHumanslcsh:ScienceSet (psychology)Biologymedia_commonMultidisciplinarylcsh:RExperimental PsychologyRecognition PsychologySensory SystemsSoundAuditory SystemAcoustic StimulationCategorizationSpectral envelopeAuditory PerceptionVoiceSensory Perceptionlcsh:QMusicResearch ArticleNeurosciencePsychoacousticsPLoS ONE
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Cortical neuroplasticity in children after early cochlear implantation

2009

Hearing is crucial to learn and use language. Loss of hearing in children affects the development of speech, language and cognitive abilities, and severely impairs social capabilities. Thus, efforts to restore auditory perception are determinative and research should be focused on factors likely to bring about the best prognosis. Numerous experimental observations demonstrate that there is a sensitive or critical period for cochlear implantation. Implantations performed in prelingually deaf children in this period are associated with better results in terms of speech recognition and language acquisition. This is the time period in which brain plasticity shows its highest level of developmen…

Auditory perceptionSpeech and Hearingmedicine.medical_specialtyCochlear implantmedicine.medical_treatmentNeuroplasticityotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineCognitionAudiologyCochlear implantationPsychologyLanguage acquisitionAudiological Medicine
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Prior Precision Modulates the Minimization of Auditory Prediction Error

2019

International audience; The predictive coding model of perception proposes that successful representation of the perceptual world depends upon canceling out the discrepancy between prediction and sensory input (i.e., prediction error). Recent studies further suggest a distinction to be made between prediction error triggered by non-predicted stimuli of different prior precision (i.e., inverse variance). However, it is not fully understood how prediction error with different precision levels is minimized in the predictive process. Here, we conducted a magnetoencephalography (MEG) experiment which orthogonally manipulated prime-probe relation (for contextual precision) and stimulus repetition…

Auditory perceptionrepetitionMean squared prediction errorSpeech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectStimulus (physiology)050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-571Cognitive Penetration[SCCO]Cognitive science03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicinePerceptual learningPerceptionmedicinemagnetoencephalography (MEG)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesaivotutkimuspredictive codinglcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatryennakointita515Biological PsychiatryOriginal ResearchVisual CortexMathematicsmedia_commonPredictive codingprediction errorMEGmedicine.diagnostic_testmagnetoencephalagraphy (MEG)[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/Neuroscience05 social sciencesMagnetoencephalographykuuloauditory perceptionPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologyhavainnointi ja aistiminenNeurologyMinificationtoistoärsykkeet030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscienceCoding TheoryFrontiers in Human Neuroscience
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Data from: Individual differences in selective attention predict speech identification at a cocktail party

2017

Listeners with normal hearing show considerable individual differences in speech understanding when competing speakers are present, as in a crowded restaurant. Here, we show that one source of this variance are individual differences in the ability to focus selective attention on a target stimulus in the presence of distractors. In 50 young normal-hearing listeners, the performance in tasks measuring auditory and visual selective attention was associated with sentence identification in the presence of spatially separated competing speakers. Together, the measures of selective attention explained a similar proportion of variance as the binaural sensitivity for the acoustic temporal fine stru…

Auditory perceptionselective attentiontemporal fine structure sensitivitypsychoacousticsbehavioral disciplines and activitiesLife sciencesworking memorymedicine and health carevisual attentionauditory attentionotorhinolaryngologic diseasesMedicinespeech-in-noise identificationindividual differencespsychological phenomena and processes
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How is Visual Recognition Entrained by Auditory Background Rhythms?

2014

AbstractRecent studies have reported that the oscillations of auditory attention entrained by a background rhythmic sequence can influence performance in visual recognition tasks. We have designed an experimental paradigm in which a visual item (either a bisyllabic word or a familiar face) is displayed on screen in two consecutive parts while a musical rhythm is played in the background. Depending on the timing conditions, the first or the second part of the item could be presented either in-synchrony or out-of-synchrony with the beats of the auditory rhythm. In a first series of experiments, participants performed a lexical decision task on bisyllabic 5-letter strings. Results show that wh…

Auditory rhythmSpeech recognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlEntrainmentRhythmPerceptionWord recognitionLexical decision taskGeneral Materials ScienceVisual WordSyllabic verseVisual recognitionLevels-of-processing effectPsychologymedia_commonProcedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences
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