How do Patient Comorbidities Influence Adult Cochlear Implant Outcomes? [PDF]
Spector B +5 more
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Reliability of Lexical Stress Transcription in Childhood Apraxia of Speech. [PDF]
Schultheiss M, Herbst B, Preston JL.
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Evaluation of a De-Escalated Post-Operative Cochlear Implant Programming Protocol. [PDF]
Asfour L +3 more
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Demographic and Acoustic Factors related to Automatic Speech Recognition Inaccuracies for Child African American English Speakers. [PDF]
Fletcher BN +8 more
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A Cross-Language Study of Oral Diadochokinesis: Rates and Rhythm. [PDF]
Kim Y, Berry J, Lee SJ, Lin L.
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A Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis of the Phonetic and Phonological Development of Children with Cochlear Implants and Its Relationship with Early Literacy. [PDF]
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Consonant identification in consonant-vowel-consonant syllables in speech-spectrum noise
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2010Identification functions of 20 initial and 20 final consonants were characterized in 9600 randomly sampled consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC) tokens presented in speech-spectrum noise. Because of differences in the response criteria for different consonants, signal detection measures were used to quantify identifiability.
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This chapter analyses the origins of a range of consonantal features in MUE. Starting with an overview of the consonant system and a comparison of it to the consonant systems of the input varieties and to those of Ulster Scots and Southern Irish English, the chapter specifically concentrates on a number of key phonological patterns, several of them ...
S.J. Hannahs, Mike Davenport
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Consonance Theory Part I: Consonance of Dyads
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1969Extensive psychological experiments were carried out in this Part I on the consonance sensation of various dyad tones consisting of two components. As the frequencies of two components f1 and f2 (with an equal SPL) separate, the consonance gradually decreases down to the most dissonant point, whereafter it monotonically increases and mostly recovers at
A, Kameoka, M, Kuriyagawa
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AbstractThere are eighteen consonant phonemes in Swedish. Sixteen of these occur in both a short and a long variant, and that distinction is phonemic. This is to say that consonants may be lexically specified with a mora. Among the most interesting properties of the consonant system is the double specification of aspiration and voicing in the ...
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