Acoustic cues to lexical segmentation: a study of resynthesized speech.
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Clear Speech Variants: An Acoustic Study in Parkinson's Disease.Neural entrainment to the rhythmic structure of music.Evidence for Multiple Rhythmic Skills.Amplitude fluctuations in a masker influence lexical segmentation in cochlear implant usersAcoustic and perceptual correlates of faster-than-habitual speech produced by speakers with Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis.Discrimination of Stochastic Frequency Modulation by Cochlear Implant Users.Discrimination of static and dynamic spectral patterns by children and young adults in relationship to speech perception in noiseDetection of high-frequency energy level changes in speech and singing.Crosslinguistic application of English-centric rhythm descriptors in motor speech disorders.Effects of age and hearing loss on the relationship between discrimination of stochastic frequency modulation and speech perception.Analysis of high-frequency energy in long-term average spectra of singing, speech, and voiceless fricativesThe Effects of Topic Knowledge on Intelligibility and Lexical Segmentation in Hypokinetic and Ataxic DysarthriaDiscriminating dysarthria type from envelope modulation spectraHorizontal directivity of low- and high-frequency energy in speech and singing.The impact of rate reduction and increased loudness on fundamental frequency characteristics in dysarthriaA cognitive-perceptual approach to conceptualizing speech intelligibility deficits and remediation practice in hypokinetic dysarthriaFundamental frequency and speech intelligibility in background noise.Low-frequency speech cues and simulated electric-acoustic hearing.The use of fundamental frequency for lexical segmentation in listeners with cochlear implants.Prosodic patterns in Hebrew child-directed speech.The Effect of Dynamic Pitch on Speech Recognition in Temporally Modulated Noise.Hybridizing conversational and clear speech to investigate the source of increased intelligibility in speakers with Parkinson's disease.Lexical Segmentation in Artificial Word Learning: The Effects of Converging Sublexical Cues.On building models of spoken-word recognition: when there is as much to learn from natural "oddities" as artificial normality.The role of perceptual salience during the segmentation of connected speech
P2860
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P2860
Acoustic cues to lexical segmentation: a study of resynthesized speech.
description
2007 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2007年の論文
@ja
2007年論文
@yue
2007年論文
@zh-hant
2007年論文
@zh-hk
2007年論文
@zh-mo
2007年論文
@zh-tw
2007年论文
@wuu
2007年论文
@zh
2007年论文
@zh-cn
name
Acoustic cues to lexical segmentation: a study of resynthesized speech.
@en
type
label
Acoustic cues to lexical segmentation: a study of resynthesized speech.
@en
prefLabel
Acoustic cues to lexical segmentation: a study of resynthesized speech.
@en
P2093
P356
P1476
Acoustic cues to lexical segmentation: a study of resynthesized speech.
@en
P2093
Julie M Liss
Stephanie M Spitzer
Sven L Mattys
P304
P356
10.1121/1.2801545
P407
P577
2007-12-01T00:00:00Z