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Skip to Search Results- 26Benjamin V. Tucker
- 16Matthew C. Kelley
- 8Filip Nenadić
- 2Catherine Ford
- 2Louis ten Bosch
- 2Scott James Perry
- 13phonetics
- 9spoken word recognition
- 5acoustic distance
- 5auditory lexical decision
- 5psycholinguistics
- 5speech perception
- 25Linguistics, Department of
- 8Linguistics, Department of/Presentations (Linguistics)
- 5Linguistics, Department of/Research Publications (Linguistics)
- 4Linguistics, Department of/Massive Auditory Lexical Decision (MALD) Database
- 4Linguistics, Department of/Mental Lexicon 2018
- 3Linguistics, Department of/Research Materials (Linguistics)
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2016-05-01
Human production and perception of language, although studied for decades, is largely misunderstood. Furthermore, not all sounds in human language have been studied extensively. Typologically rare sounds arguably lack reliable documentation and research. One such sound is voiceless nasals. Debate...
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2017-10-20
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
bBoiA sizable number of phonetic and psycholinguistic experiments have been conducted to investigate the recognition of real words. From this work, researchers have found that various characteristics of lexical items affect the recognition process, such as lexical frequency, phonotactic...
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2017-01-01
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
A number of speech perception studies have been carried out to investigate how we process audio signals containing real words. However, comparatively fewer studies have been conducted looking at how listeners process audio signals containing phonotactically legal pseudowords. Some traditional...
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2017-06-23
Filip Nenadić, Benjamin V. Tucker
Research on silent reading has shown that text genre influences the way texts are read, including differences between prose and poetry (e.g. Zwaan, 1994; Hanauer, 1998). There is little data examining whether text layout (prose vs. poetry) affects the way it is read aloud by non-expert readers,...
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2017-12-07
Benjamin V. Tucker, Filip Nenadić, Louis ten Bosch
In recent years, computational modeling has proved to be an essential tool for investigating cognitive processes underlying speech perception (see, e.g., Scharenborg & Boves, 2010). Here we address the question of how an end-to-end computational model that uses the acoustic signal as input...
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2018-01-01
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
Poster for the paper "A comparison of input types to a deep neural network-based forced aligner," presented at Interspeech 2018. Typo in alignment matrix (O[2,2] referenced O[1,2] instead of O[1,1]) updated on June 4, 2019. PAPER ABSTRACT: The present paper investigates the effect of different...
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2018-01-01
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
The present paper investigates the effect of different inputs on the accuracy of a forced alignment tool built using deep neural networks. Both raw audio samples and Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients were compared as network inputs. A set of experiments were performed using the TIMIT speech...
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2018-12-20
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
This paper has been significantly updated and published in The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. Please read and cite that version instead, which can be found at https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0009584. The present study quantifies the effects of lexical competition during spoken word...
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2019-05-01
Matthew C. Kelley, Benjamin V. Tucker
Measures of vowel overlap explore the acoustic similarity between proposed and existing vowel categories. They typically compare F1 and F2, and sometimes duration. In the present study, we investigate four methods of quantifying vowel overlap: the spectral overlap assessment metric (Wassink,...
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jTRACE/TISK simulations material
2019-11-11
Filip Nenadić, Benjamin V. Tucker
This material includes scripts and results of a series of simulations performed using jTRACE and TISK on Massive Auditory Lexical Decision project data.