DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2
Hits 1 – 20 of 31

1
Mandatory dichotic integration of second-formant information: Contralateral sine bleats have predictable effects on consonant place judgments
Abstract: Speech-on-speech informational masking arises because the interferer disrupts target processing (e.g., capacity limitations) or corrupts it (e.g., intrusions into the target percept); the latter should produce predictable errors. Listeners identified the consonant in monaural buzz-excited three-formant analogues of approximant-vowel syllables, forming a place of articulation series (/w/-/l/-/j/). There were two 11-member series; the vowel was either high-front or low-back. Series members shared formant-amplitude contours, fundamental frequency, and F1+F3 frequency contours; they were distinguished solely by the F2 frequency contour before the steady portion. Targets were always presented in the left ear. For each series, F2 frequency and amplitude contours were also used to generate interferers with altered source properties—sine-wave analogues of F2 (sine bleats) matched to their buzz-excited counterparts. Accompanying each series member with a fixed mismatched sine bleat in the contralateral ear produced systematic and predictable effects on category judgments; these effects were usually largest for bleats involving the fastest rate or greatest extent of frequency change. Judgments of isolated sine bleats using the three place labels were often unsystematic or arbitrary. These results indicate that informational masking by interferers involved corruption of target processing as a result of mandatory dichotic integration of F2 information, despite the grouping cues disfavoring this integration.
URL: https://publications.aston.ac.uk/id/eprint/43291/
https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0007132
https://publications.aston.ac.uk/id/eprint/43291/1/10.0007132.pdf
BASE
Hide details
2
Informational masking and the effects of differences in fundamental frequency and fundamental-frequency contour on phonetic integration in a formant ensemble
BASE
Show details
3
Across-formant integration and speech intelligibility:effects of acoustic source properties in the presence and absence of a contralateral interferer
BASE
Show details
4
Acoustic source characteristics, across-formant integration, and speech intelligibility under competitive conditions
BASE
Show details
5
Acoustic Source Characteristics, Across-Formant Integration, and Speech Intelligibility Under Competitive Conditions
Roberts, Brian; Summers, Robert J.; Bailey, Peter J.. - : American Psychological Association, 2015
BASE
Show details
6
Formant-Frequency Variation and Informational Masking of Speech by Extraneous Formants: Evidence Against Dynamic and Speech-Specific Acoustical Constraints
Roberts, Brian; Summers, Robert J.; Bailey, Peter J.. - : American Psychological Association, 2014
BASE
Show details
7
Formant-frequency variation and its effects on across-formant grouping in speech perception
BASE
Show details
8
The intelligibility of noise-vocoded speech:spectral information available from across-channel comparison of amplitude envelopes
BASE
Show details
9
Effects of the Rate of Formant-Frequency Variation on the Grouping of Formants in Speech Perception
Summers, Robert J.; Bailey, Peter J.; Roberts, Brian. - : Springer-Verlag, 2011
BASE
Show details
10
The intelligibility of noise-vocoded speech: spectral information available from across-channel comparison of amplitude envelopes
Roberts, Brian; Summers, Robert J.; Bailey, Peter J.. - : The Royal Society, 2011
BASE
Show details
11
Dissociations between serial position and number of letters effects in lateralised visual word recognition
In: Journal of research in reading. - Leeds : Wiley-Blackwell 28 (2005) 3, 258-273
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
Show details
12
Hearing - Articles and Reports - Auditory Temporal Order Discrimination and Backward Recognition Masking in Adults With Dyslexia
In: Journal of speech, language, and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 46 (2003) 6, 1352-1366
OLC Linguistik
Show details
13
Auditory temporal order discrimination and backward recognition masking in adults with dyslexia
In: Journal of speech, language, and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 46 (2003) 6, 1352-1366
BLLDB
Show details
14
Handedness, measures of hemispheric asymmetry, and lateralised lexical decision
In: Laterality. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 8 (2003) 4, 347-360
BLLDB
Show details
15
Auditory processing and the development of language and literacy
Bailey, Peter J; Snowling, Margaret J. - : Oxford University Press, 2002
BASE
Show details
16
Rapid auditory processing and phonological ability in normal readers and readers with dyslexia
In: Journal of speech, language, and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 44 (2001) 4, 925-940
BLLDB
Show details
17
Language - Articles and Reports - Rapid Auditory Processing and Phonological Ability in Normal Readers and Readers With Dyslexia
In: Journal of speech, language, and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 44 (2001) 4, 925
OLC Linguistik
Show details
18
Auditory spatial attention using interaural time differences
In: Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance. - Washington, DC [u.a.] : Assoc. 26 (2000) 2, 717-729
BLLDB
Show details
19
Frequency acuity and binaural masking release in dyslexic listeners
In: Acoustical Society of America. The journal of the Acoustical Society of America. - Melville, NY : AIP 106 (1999) 6, L53-L58
BLLDB
Show details
20
Remediating a speech perception deficit in an aphasic patient
In: Aphasiology. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 10 (1996) 2, 137-158
BLLDB
Show details

Page: 1 2

Catalogues
0
0
4
0
0
0
0
Bibliographies
16
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
11
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern