Detail Information
Publications
Relative spectral change and formant transitions as cues to labial and alveolar place of articulationM F Dorman
Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, Tempe 85287 0102, USA
J Acoust Soc Am 100:3825-30. 1996..This outcome provides no support for the view that the relative spectral change is a significant perceptual cue to stop consonant place of articulation...
Speech intelligibility as a function of the number of channels of stimulation for signal processors using sine-wave and noise-band outputsM F Dorman
Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, Tempe 85287 0102, USA
J Acoust Soc Am 102:2403-11. 1997....
Simulating the effect of cochlear-implant electrode insertion depth on speech understandingM F Dorman
Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, Tempe 85287 0102, USA
J Acoust Soc Am 102:2993-6. 1997..It is inferred from these results that, if insertion depth could be unconfounded from other coexisting factors in implant patients, then insertion depth would be found to affect speech identification performance significantly...
Exploration of the perceptual magnet effect using the mismatch negativity auditory evoked potentialA Sharma
Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, Tempe 85287 0102, USA
J Acoust Soc Am 104:511-7. 1998..Taken together, the behavioral and electrophysiologic results indicate that discrimination of stimulus pairs near a prototype is based on the auditory structure of the stimulus pairs...
Cortical auditory evoked potential correlates of categorical perception of voice-onset timeA Sharma
Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, Tempe 85287 0102, USA
J Acoust Soc Am 106:1078-83. 1999..Thus the enhanced MMN responses and the morphological discontinuity in N1 morphology observed in the region of the /da/-/ta/ phonetic boundary appear to provide neurophysiologic correlates of categorical perception for VOT...
Neurophysiologic correlates of cross-language phonetic perceptionA Sharma
Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, Tempe 85287 0102, USA
J Acoust Soc Am 107:2697-703. 2000..These results suggest that neurophysiologic levels of stimulus processing reflected by the MMN and N1 are differentially altered by linguistic experience...
