The benefit of binaural hearing in a cocktail party: effect of location and type of interferer.
about
The encoding of auditory objects in auditory cortex: insights from magnetoencephalography.The cocktail party problem: what is it? How can it be solved? And why should animal behaviorists study it?Having Two Ears Facilitates the Perceptual Separation of Concurrent Talkers for Bilateral and Single-Sided Deaf Cochlear Implantees.Role of Binaural Temporal Fine Structure and Envelope Cues in Cocktail-Party Listening.Does Bilateral Experience Lead to Improved Spatial Unmasking of Speech in Children Who Use Bilateral Cochlear Implants?Neural Representation of Interaural Time Differences in Humans-an Objective Measure that Matches Behavioural PerformanceA Binaural Grouping Model for Predicting Speech Intelligibility in Multitalker Environments.Spatial release from masking in children with bilateral cochlear implants and with normal hearing: Effect of target-interferer similaritySimultaneous Assessment of Speech Identification and Spatial Discrimination: A Potential Testing Approach for Bilateral Cochlear Implant Users?Validity and reliability of the Persian version of spatial hearing questionnaire.Audio-visual speech intelligibility benefits with bilateral cochlear implants when talker location varies.Differences in Speech Recognition Between Children with Attention Deficits and Typically Developed Children Disappear When Exposed to 65 dB of Auditory Noise.Sensitivity to interaural envelope correlation changes in bilateral cochlear-implant users.Effect of spatial separation and noise type on sentence recognition by Mandarin-speaking cochlear implant users.Development of the auditory system.Spatial hearing benefits demonstrated with presentation of acoustic temporal fine structure cues in bilateral cochlear implant listeners.Auditory Spatial Discrimination and the Mismatch Negativity Response in Hearing-Impaired Individuals.Application of a short-time version of the Equalization-Cancellation model to speech intelligibility experiments with speech maskersAn Auditory Illusion of Proximity of the Source Induced by Sonic Crystals.Impact of a moving noise masker on speech perception in cochlear implant usersSelective spatial attention modulates bottom-up informational masking of speech.Investigating long-term effects of cochlear implantation in single-sided deafness: a best practice model for longitudinal assessment of spatial hearing abilities and tinnitus handicap.Reverberation impairs brainstem temporal representations of voiced vowel sounds: challenging "periodicity-tagged" segregation of competing speech in rooms.Phase effects in masking by harmonic complexes: speech recognitionMulti-talker background and semantic priming effectDecreased ability in the segregation of dynamically changing vowel-analog streams: a factor in the age-related cocktail-party deficit?Listening to speech in a background of other talkers: effects of talker number and noise vocoding.Independent impacts of age and hearing loss on spatial release in a complex auditory environmentPredicting the speech reception threshold of cochlear implant listeners using an envelope-correlation based measure.Benefits and detriments of unilateral cochlear implant use on bilateral auditory development in children who are deaf.Emphasis of spatial cues in the temporal fine structure during the rising segments of amplitude-modulated sounds.Spatial release from masking in children with normal hearing and with bilateral cochlear implants: effect of interferer asymmetry.Spatial cues alone produce inaccurate sound segregation: the effect of interaural time differences.Evaluation of different signal processing options in unilateral and bilateral cochlear freedom implant recipients using R-Space background noiseDip listening and the cocktail party problem in grey treefrogs: Signal recognition in temporally fluctuating noise.Masker location uncertainty reveals evidence for suppression of maskers in two-talker contexts.Interaural level differences do not suffice for restoring spatial release from masking in simulated cochlear implant listening.Sound localization in noise by normal-hearing listeners and cochlear implant users.Gain-induced speech distortions and the absence of intelligibility benefit with existing noise-reduction algorithms.A cocktail party model of spatial release from masking by both noise and speech interferers.
P2860
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P2860
The benefit of binaural hearing in a cocktail party: effect of location and type of interferer.
description
2004 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2004 թուականի Փետրուարին հրատարակուած գիտական յօդուած
@hyw
2004 թվականի փետրվարին հրատարակված գիտական հոդված
@hy
2004年の論文
@ja
2004年論文
@yue
2004年論文
@zh-hant
2004年論文
@zh-hk
2004年論文
@zh-mo
2004年論文
@zh-tw
2004年论文
@wuu
name
The benefit of binaural hearin ...... cation and type of interferer.
@ast
The benefit of binaural hearin ...... cation and type of interferer.
@en
The benefit of binaural hearin ...... cation and type of interferer.
@nl
type
label
The benefit of binaural hearin ...... cation and type of interferer.
@ast
The benefit of binaural hearin ...... cation and type of interferer.
@en
The benefit of binaural hearin ...... cation and type of interferer.
@nl
prefLabel
The benefit of binaural hearin ...... cation and type of interferer.
@ast
The benefit of binaural hearin ...... cation and type of interferer.
@en
The benefit of binaural hearin ...... cation and type of interferer.
@nl
P356
P1476
The benefit of binaural hearin ...... cation and type of interferer.
@en
P2093
Monica L Hawley
Ruth Y Litovsky
P304
P356
10.1121/1.1639908
P577
2004-02-01T00:00:00Z