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Research data supporting "Perception of rhythmic speech is modulated by focal bilateral transcranial alternating current stimulation" ...
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Research data supporting "Perception of rhythmic speech is modulated by focal bilateral transcranial alternating current stimulation"
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Intelligibility of conversational and clear speech in young and older talkers as perceived by young and older listeners
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Homogeneity or implicature : an experimental investigation of free choice
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Introduction to the special issue on auditory-visual expressive speech and gesture in humans and machines
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Investigating the role of familiar face and voice cues in speech processing in noise
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The effect of spectral profile on the intelligibility of emotional speech in noise
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Older and younger adults' identification of sentences filtered with amplitude and frequency modulations in quiet and noise
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The influence of auditory-visual speech and clear speech on cross-language perceptual assimilation
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Perceptual learning of degraded speech by minimizing prediction error.
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In: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A , 113 (12) E1747-E1756. (2016) (2016)
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Can English perceivers match cantonese auditory and visual prosody?
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The consistency and stability of acoustic and visual cues for different prosodic attitudes
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The relative contributions of duration and amplitude to the perception of Japanese-accented English as a function of L2 experience
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The influence of modality and speaking style on the assimilation type and categorization consistency of non-native speech
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Exploring the role of brain oscillations in speech perception in noise : intelligibility of isochronously retimed speech
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Perceiving foreign-accented auditory-visual speech in noise : the influence of visual form and timing information
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Amodal processing of visual speech as revealed by priming
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In: Cognition (2015)
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Amodal processing of visual speech as revealed by priming
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In: Cognition (2015)
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Articulatory constraints on spontaneous entrainment between speech and manual gesture
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Anticipation of turn-switching in auditory-visual dialogs
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Abstract:
This paper presents an experiment in which we examined whether German and Australian English perceivers were able to predict imminent turn-switching in Australian English auditory-visual dialogs. Subjects were presented excerpts of one and four second duration either preceding a switch or taken from inside a turn and had to decide which condition they saw. Stimuli were either A/V, video-only or audio-only. Results on the one second excerpts were close to random. In general we found a preference for non-switching. Australian subjects outperformed the German subjects in the audio-only condition, but outcomes were almost equal on the A/V stimuli. Analysis regarding the syntactic and prosodic properties of the stimuli showed that phrase-final statement as well as question intonation facilitated recognition presumably due to these acting as markers of turn-switch preparation; whereas incomplete sentences and non-terminal intonation were indicative of turn-internal excerpts. As to visual cues signaling a following switch results were rather varied. An open mouth on the part of the listener more often preceded switches than not.
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Keyword:
170112 - Sensory Processes; auditory perception; Perception and Performance; prosodic analysis (linguistics); speech perception; visual perception
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URL: http://faavsp2015.ftw.at/ http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:32286
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