5 results match your criteria: "Oyer Center[Affiliation]"

Listeners resolve ambiguities in speech perception using multiple sources, including non-local or distal speech rate (i.e., the speech rate of material surrounding a particular region).

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The Role of Secondary-Stressed and Unstressed-Unreduced Syllables in Word Recognition: Acoustic and Perceptual Studies with Russian Learners of English.

J Psycholinguist Res

August 2016

Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Bowling Green State University, 238 Health and Human Services Building, Bowling Green, OH, 43403, USA.

The importance of secondary-stressed (SS) and unstressed-unreduced (UU) syllable accuracy for spoken word recognition in English is as yet unclear. An acoustic study first investigated Russian learners' of English production of SS and UU syllables. Significant vowel quality and duration reductions in Russian-spoken SS and UU vowels were found, likely due to a transfer of native phonological features.

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Interactions between distal speech rate, linguistic knowledge, and speech environment.

Psychon Bull Rev

October 2015

Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, Michigan State University, Oyer Center, 1026 Red Cedar Road, East Lansing, MI, 48824, USA.

During lexical access, listeners use both signal-based and knowledge-based cues, and information from the linguistic context can affect the perception of acoustic speech information. Recent findings suggest that the various cues used in lexical access are implemented with flexibility and may be affected by information from the larger speech context. We conducted 2 experiments to examine effects of a signal-based cue (distal speech rate) and a knowledge-based cue (linguistic structure) on lexical perception.

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Due to extensive variability in the phonetic realizations of words, there may be few or no proximal spectro-temporal cues that identify a word's onset or even its presence. Dilley and Pitt (2010) showed that the rate of context speech, distal from a to-be-recognized word, can have a sizeable effect on whether or not a word is perceived. This investigation considered whether there is a distinct role for distal rhythm in the disappearing word effect.

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Accent-independent adaptation to foreign accented speech.

J Acoust Soc Am

March 2013

Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, Michigan State University, Oyer Center B-7, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA.

Foreign-accented speech can be difficult to understand but listeners can adapt to novel talkers and accents with appropriate experience. Previous studies have demonstrated talker-independent but accent-dependent learning after training on multiple talkers from a single language background. Here, listeners instead were exposed to talkers from five language backgrounds during training.

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