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Acoustic cues to coda stop voicing contrasts in Australian English-speaking children
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Temporal cues to onset voicing contrasts in Australian English-speaking children
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[In Press] The acquisition of acoustic cues to onset and coda voicing contrasts by preschoolers with hearing loss
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AusKidTalk : an auditory-visual corpus of 3- to 12-year-old Australian children's speech
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Maternal Depression Affects Infants’ Lexical Processing Abilities in the Second Year of Life
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In: Brain Sci (2020)
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Maternal depression affects infants' lexical processing abilities in the second year of life
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Visual speech cues speed processing and reduce effort for children listening in quiet and noise
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Markedness and the Development of Prosodic Structure
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In: North East Linguistics Society (2020)
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Acquisition of Mandarin tonal processes (Tang et al., 2019) ...
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Hypo-Articulation of the Four-Way Voicing Contrast in Nepali Infant-Directed Speech ...
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Hypo-Articulation of the Four-Way Voicing Contrast in Nepali Infant-Directed Speech ...
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Visual speech cues improve children's processing speed in both quiet and noise
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Abstract:
The presence of visual cues can facilitate speech processing in adults, conferring an ‘audiovisual (AV) benefit’ in noisy listening conditions. However, it is unclear to what extent such benefits extend to quiet conditions and to children. A phoneme monitoring task was used to determine whether 7-11 year-old children show an AV benefit for accuracy and/or speed of processing in either quiet or noise, and whether the magnitude of this benefit differs between listening conditions. An AV benefit for processing speed was found, unaffected by listening conditions. This suggests that visual speech cues can be used by children to facilitate speech processing generally, not just in noise. We therefore believe that visual speech cues may be used to assist children to rapidly process speech in everyday situations.
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Keyword:
520405 - Psycholinguistics (incl. speech production and comprehension)
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URL: https://assta.org/proceedings/ICPhS2019/ https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:62710
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The narrative past inflection in Sesotho child and child-directed speech
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Audiovisual benefits for speech processing speed among children with hearing loss
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Durational cues to place and voicing contrasts in Australian English word-initial stops
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The Acquisition of Sesotho Double Object Constructions
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In: IULC Working Papers; Vol 1 No 2 (2001): Explorations in African Linguistics ; 1524-2110 (2018)
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Listener characteristics modulate the semantic processing of native vs. foreign-accented speech
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