This July, Matthew Oaks, recent TAP Lab graduate, presented his research at SMPC. The project title was “How Slow is Too Slow: Investigating the Breakdown of Rhythmic Grouping at Slow Tempi”. The study examined the role of tempo in determining whether sounds are perceived as grouped together or isolated in time.
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This May, recent graduate Kyle Oliver presented a poster titled “The role of speech rhythm in speech understanding in zoom-like conditions” at the Midwest Cognitive Science Conference in Athens, OH.
This May, recent graduate Kyle Oliver presented a poster titled “The role of speech rhythm in speech understanding in zoom-like conditions” at the Midwest Cognitive Science Conference in Athens, OH.
This May, PhD student Toni Smith & Lab Manager Bailey Rann presented a poster titled, “Relationship between working memory and auditory rhythm discrimination in adults who stutter” at the Midwest Cognitive Science Conference in Athens, OH.
This May, PhD student Toni Smith & Lab Manager Bailey Rann presented a poster titled, “Relationship between working memory and auditory rhythm discrimination in adults who stutter” at the Midwest Cognitive Science Conference in Athens, OH.
This April, Lab Manager Bailey Rann presented a talk at the Symposium on Timing and Rhythm (STAR) conference at McMaster University in Hamilton, ON titled “Inconceivable! The spontaneous synchronization to speech test does not measure what you think it does”.
This April, Lab Manager Bailey Rann presented a talk at the Symposium on Timing and Rhythm (STAR) conference at McMaster University in Hamilton, ON titled “Inconceivable! The spontaneous synchronization to speech test does not measure what you think it does”.
This April, PhD student Toni Smith presented a talk at the Symposium on Timing and Rhythm (STAR) conference at McMaster University in Hamilton, ON titled”Examining the effects of target speech rhythm on understanding speech in noise”.
This April, PhD student Toni Smith presented a talk at the Symposium on Timing and Rhythm (STAR) conference at McMaster University in Hamilton, ON titled “Examining the effects of target speech rhythm on understanding speech in noise”.