12 results match your criteria: "University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280.[Affiliation]"
Ment Retard
August 2000
School of Social Work, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280, USA.
The importance of understanding specific methods and strategies for conducting mental retardation research in Latino communities is discussed. Research methods used in the recruitment and analysis of a sample of 72 Puerto Rican mothers of a son or daughter with mental retardation are described. The emphasis is on the importance of involving the community in many aspects of the study in order to (a) ensure that the community benefits, (b) strengthen the scientific integrity of the study, and (c) facilitate sample recruitment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
October 1998
Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280, USA.
A simple normalization procedure was applied to point-parametrized articulatory data to yield quantitative speaker-general descriptions of "average" vowel postures. Articulatory data from 20 English and 8 Japanese speakers, drawn from existing x-ray microbeam database corpora, were included in the analysis. The purpose of the normalization procedure was to minimize the effects of differences in vocal tract size and shape on average postures derived from the raw data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Commun Disord
August 1999
Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280, USA.
(1) The reader will be able to describe the major types of acoustic analysis available for the study of speech, (2) specify the components needed for a modern speech analysis laboratory, including equipment for recording and analysis, and (3) list possible measurements for various aspects of phonation, articulation and resonance, as they might be manifest in neurologically disordered speech.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
May 1999
Department of Communicative Disorders, Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280, USA.
Peri- and intraoral devices are often used to obtain measurements concerning articulator motions and placements. Surprisingly, there are few formal evaluations of the potential influence of these devices on speech production behavior. In particular, the potential effects of lingual pellets or coils used in x-ray or electromagnetic studies of tongue motion have never been evaluated formally, even though a large x-ray database exists and electromagnetic systems are commercially available.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Bull
January 1999
Waisman Center on Mental Retardation and Human Development, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280, USA.
Occasionally, people with developmental disability display skills at a level inconsistent with their general intellectual functioning, so-called "savant" behavior. Studies of savant behavior are reviewed to determine their relevance to notions about the importance of general intellective functions in the development of exceptional skill. It is concluded that (a) the skill exhibited by savants shares many characteristics with that in people without disability, (b) the skill is usually accompanied by normative levels of performance on at least some subtests of standardized measures of cognitive achievement, and (c) it is unclear whether savants have distinctive cognitive strengths or motivational dispositions, though their relative prevalence among people with certain kinds of disability suggests predisposing constraints.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVision Res
February 1996
Department of Ophthalmology, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280, USA.
Brightness of uniform fields during normal and stabilized viewing was determined as a function of adapting luminance, field size, and luminance gradient of the edges of the adapting field. In one set of experiments, it was found that, over a range of adapting luminances from 6 to 9600 td, a uniformly-illuminated 7.5 deg hemifield appeared about 1 log unit brighter in normal viewing than when it was retinally-stabilized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
August 1995
Department of Communicative Disorders, Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280, USA.
Duplex perception occurs when part of the acoustic signal is used for both a speech and a nonspeech percept. This phenomenon has been interpreted as evidence of a distinct system for speech perception that precedes other specialized systems of general auditory processing (such as auditory grouping, and perception of pitch, loudness, and timbre). This interpretation was investigated by using an intensity-dependent form of duplex perception with the acoustic pair /da/ and /ga/.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVision Res
October 1993
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280.
Fading time of a retinally-stabilized difference-of-Gaussian (DOG) stimulus depends on the background luminance, contrast and spatial frequency content of the stimulus. A model of the visual system including a nonlinear multiplicative, non-local and fast process followed by a linear subtractive, local and slower process accounts for these effects. Analysis of the fading time data allows us to estimate the spatiotemporal characteristics of the proposed adaptation processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Voice
June 1993
Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280.
This paper considers the topic of vocal tract acoustics from the three perspectives: (a) the acoustic theory of speech production; (b) contemporary laboratory methods for acoustic analysis, and (c) measurement of the acoustic signal of speech. Linear source-filter theory is the standard acoustic theory of speech production and is the foundation for remarkable advances in the analysis and synthesis of speech. Digital signal processing, the dominant laboratory method for speech analysis, enables the acquisition and recording of the acoustic speech signal but also implements quantitative algorithms largely based on linear source-filter theory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
February 1992
Department of Communicative Disorders, Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280.
The purpose of this study was to describe the formant trajectories produced by males with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a degenerative neuromuscular disease that is typically associated with dysarthria. Formant trajectories of 25 males with ALS and 15 neurologically normal geriatric males were compared for 12 words selected from the speech intelligibility task developed by Kent et al. [J.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Ther
December 1990
Waisman Center on Mental Retardation and Human Development, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280.
In the last decade, a great deal of research has been aimed at ascertaining the manner in which the basal ganglia (BG) contribute to the control of movement. The formation of workable hypotheses, however, has been limited by the great variety of putative roles reported in the literature. Reported functions have often been in direct conflict.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Speech Hear Res
September 1988
Speech Motor Control Laboratories, Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53705-2280.
Spectrographic measures of voice onset time (VOT) were made for phonologically disordered children in whom a voicing contrast was just beginning to emerge. These temporal measures were related to adult listeners' perception of voicing of the initial stop consonant to determine how well VOT could predict perceived voicing. In general, the predictive utility of VOT was not very high.
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