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1
Regional Alteration within the Cerebellum and the Reorganization of the Cerebrocerebellar System following Poststroke Aphasia
In: Neural Plast (2022)
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2
Transfer Effect of Speech-sound Learning on Auditory-motor Processing of Perceived Vocal Pitch Errors
Chen, Zhaocong; Wong, Francis C. K.; Jones, Jeffery A.. - : Nature Publishing Group, 2015
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3
Transfer Effect of Speech-sound Learning on Auditory-motor Processing of Perceived Vocal Pitch Errors
In: Psychology Faculty Publications (2015)
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4
Auditory Feedback Control of Vocal Pitch during Sustained Vocalization: A Cross-Sectional Study of Adult Aging
In: Psychology Faculty Publications (2011)
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5
Effect of tonal native language on voice fundamental frequency responses to pitch feedback perturbations during sustained vocalizations
Abstract: The purpose of this cross-language study was to examine whether the online control of voice fundamental frequency (F0) during vowel phonation is influenced by language experience. Native speakers of Cantonese and Mandarin, both tonal languages spoken in China, participated in the experiments. Subjects were asked to vocalize a vowel sound ∕u∕ at their comfortable habitual F0, during which their voice pitch was unexpectedly shifted (±50, ±100, ±200, or ±500 cents, 200 ms duration) and fed back instantaneously to them over headphones. The results showed that Cantonese speakers produced significantly smaller responses than Mandarin speakers when the stimulus magnitude varied from 200 to 500 cents. Further, response magnitudes decreased along with the increase in stimulus magnitude in Cantonese speakers, which was not observed in Mandarin speakers. These findings suggest that online control of voice F0 during vocalization is sensitive to language experience. Further, systematic modulations of vocal responses across stimulus magnitude were observed in Cantonese speakers but not in Mandarin speakers, which indicates that this highly automatic feedback mechanism is sensitive to the specific tonal system of each language.
Keyword: Speech Production [70]
URL: https://doi.org/10.1121/1.3500675
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3037774
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21218905
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