1 |
Artificial Grammar Learning in children, adults, animals and machines
|
|
|
|
In: ISSN: 1756-8757 ; EISSN: 1756-8765 ; Topics in cognitive science ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02877137 ; Topics in cognitive science, Wiley, 2020 (2020)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
2 |
Mechanisms underlying speech sound discrimination and categorization in humans and zebra finches
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
3 |
A general auditory bias for handling speaker variability in speech? Evidence in humans and songbirds
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
4 |
Revisiting vocal perception in non-human animals : a review of vowel discrimination, speaker voice recognition, and speaker normalization
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
6 |
Zebra Finch Song Phonology and Syntactical Structure across Populations and Continents—A Computational Comparison
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
7 |
Assessing the uniqueness of language: Animal grammatical abilities take center stage
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
8 |
Revisiting vocal perception in non-human animals: a review of vowel discrimination, speaker voice recognition, and speaker normalization
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
10 |
Pauses enhance chunk recognition in song element strings by zebra finches
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
11 |
The interplay of within-species perceptual predispositions and experience during song ontogeny in zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata)
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
12 |
Vocal tract articulation revisited: the case of the monk parakeet
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
13 |
Vocal tract articulation revisited: the case of the monk parakeet
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
14 |
Revisiting the syntactic abilities of non-human animals: natural vocalizations and artificial grammar learning
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
15 |
Zebra finches and Dutch adults exhibit the same cue weighting bias in vowel perception
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
16 |
Zebra finches exhibit speaker-independent phonetic perception of human speech
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
17 |
Simple rules can explain discrimination of putative recursive syntactic structures by a songbird species
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
|
|