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1
Speech perception under adverse conditions: insights from behavioral, computational, and neuroscience research
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2
Learning foreign sounds in an alien world: videogame training improves non-native speech categorization
In: http://psych.stanford.edu/~jlm/pdfs/LimHolt2011.pdf (2011)
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3
Speech perception as categorization
In: http://www.psy.cmu.edu:16080/%7Elholt/publications/HoltLotto2010.pdf (2010)
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4
contribute to speech perception?
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5
Update Letters Response Response to Wilson: What does motor cortex contribute to speech perception?
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6
Expertise with Artificial Nonspeech Sounds Recruits Speech-Sensitive Cortical Regions
In: http://www.psy.cmu.edu:16080/~lholt/publications/LeechEtAl2009.pdf (2009)
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7
eFFECTS OF aTTENTION ON . . . on Speech Perception: Behavioral Experiments and Computational Mechanisms
In: http://psychology.stanford.edu/~jlm/papers/MirmanMcCHoltMagnuson08Attention.pdf (2008)
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8
Effects of Attention on the Strength of Lexical Influences on Speech Perception: Behavioral Experiments and Computational Mechanisms
In: http://www.psy.cmu.edu:16080/~lholt/publications/MirmanMcClellandHoltMagnuson2008.pdf (2008)
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9
RELATIONAL TIMING OR ABSOLUTE DURATION? CUE WEIGHTING IN THE PERCEPTION OF JAPANESE SINGLETON-GEMINATE STOPS
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10
An interactive Hebbian account of lexically guided tuning of speech perception
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11
Are there interactive processes in speech perception?
In: http://psychology.stanford.edu/~jlm/papers/McCMirmanHolt06_TiCS.pdf (2006)
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12
Attentional Modulation of Lexical Effects on Speech Perception: Computational and Behavioral Experiments
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13
Attentional Modulation of Lexical Effects on Speech Perception: Computational and Behavioral Experiments
In: http://www.psy.cmu.edu:16080/~lholt/publications/MirmanMcClellandHolt_CogSci2006.pdf (2006)
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14
Response to McQueen et al.: Theoretical and empirical arguments support interactive processing
In: http://psychology.stanford.edu/~jlm/papers/MirmanMcCHolt06_TiCS.pdf (2006)
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15
An interactive Hebbian account of lexically guided tuning of speech perception
In: http://www.psy.cmu.edu:16080/~lholt/publications/Mirman_etal2006_HebbTRACE.pdf (2006)
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16
Are there interactive processes in speech perception?
In: http://www.psy.cmu.edu:16080/~lholt/publications/McClellandMirmanHolt2006.pdf (2006)
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17
A commentary on Fowler (2006)
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18
Putting phonetic context effects into context: A Commentary On Fowler (2006)
In: http://www.psy.cmu.edu:16080/~lholt/publications/LottoHolt2006.pdf (2006)
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19
Temporally Nonadjacent Nonlinguistic Sounds Affect Speech Categorization
In: http://www.psy.cmu.edu:16080/~lholt/publications/Holt2005.pdf (2005)
Abstract: Speech perception is an ecologically important example of the highly context-dependent nature of perception; adjacent speech, and even nonspeech, sounds influence how listeners categorize speech. Some theories emphasize linguistic or articulation-based processes in speech-elicited context effects and peripheral (cochlear) auditory perceptual interactions in non-speech-elicited context effects. The present studies challenge this division. Results of three experiments indicate that acoustic histories composed of sine-wave tones drawn from spectral distributions with different mean frequencies robustly affect speech categorization. These context effects were observed even when the acoustic context temporally adjacent to the speech stimulus was held constant and when more than a second of silence or multiple intervening sounds separated the nonlinguistic acoustic context and speech targets. These experiments indicate that speech categorization is sensitive to statistical distributions of spectral information, even if the distributions are composed of nonlinguistic elements. Acoustic context need be neither linguistic nor local to influence speech perception.
URL: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.140.5507
http://www.psy.cmu.edu:16080/~lholt/publications/Holt2005.pdf
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20
Micro-mixers – a review
In: ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc/f2/2e/Front_Psychol_2012_Feb_1_3_10.tar.gz (2005)
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