Ceuleers, Dorien Keppler, Hannah Degeest, Sofie Baudonck, Nele Swinnen, Freya Kestens, Katrien Dhooge, Ingeborg
Objectives: Speech understanding is considered a bimodal and bidirectional process, whereby visual information (i.e., speechreading) and also cognitive functions (i.e., top-down processes) are involved. Therefore, the purpose of the present study is twofold: (1) to investigate the auditory (A), visual (V), and cognitive (C) abilities in normal-hear...
Kries, Jill; De Clercq, Pieter; 137757; Lemmens, Robin; 25156; Francart, Tom; 46624; Vandermosten, Maaike; 48220;
Acoustic and phonemic processing are understudied in aphasia, a language disorder that can affect different levels and modalities of language processing. For successful speech comprehension, processing of the speech envelope is necessary, which relates to amplitude changes over time (e.g., the rise times). Moreover, to identify speech sounds (i.e.,...
De Clercq, Pieter; 137757; Vanthornhout, Jonas; 77061; Vandermosten, Maaike; 48220; Francart, Tom; 46624;
Objective.The human brain tracks the temporal envelope of speech, which contains essential cues for speech understanding. Linear models are the most common tool to study neural envelope tracking. However, information on how speech is processed can be lost since nonlinear relations are precluded. Analysis based on mutual information (MI), on the oth...
Desot, Thierry Portet, François Vacher, Michel
Spoken Language Understanding (SLU) is a core task in most human-machine interaction systems. With the emergence of smart homes, smart phones and smart speakers, SLU has become a key technology for the industry. In a classical SLU approach, an Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) module transcribes the speech signal into a textual representation from...
Kestens, Katrien Degeest, Sofie Keppler, Hannah
Purpose: This study aimed to get insight into the views and experience of audiologists, employed in Flemish hearing aid centers, concerning cognition within audiological practice. Method: An online 49-item questionnaire was developed and subdivided into five categories: (a) work setting, (b) practical experience regarding hearing aid fitting linked...
McKnight, S Hogg, A Neo, V Naylor, P
This paper studies the ranges of acoustic andmodulation frequencies of speech most relevant for identifyingspeakers and compares the speaker-specific information presentin the temporal envelope against that present in the temporalfine structure. This study uses correlation and feature importancemeasures, random forest and convolutional neural netwo...
Vink, Henk A.; van Dorp, Willem C.; Thomeer, Hans G.X.M.; 42233; Versnel, Huib; Ramekers, Dyan;
status: published
Gransier, Robin; 95902; Carlyon, Robert P; Wouters, Jan; 10113;
Cochlear-implant (CI) users rely on temporal envelope modulations (TEMs) to understand speech, and clinical outcomes depend on the accuracy with which these TEMs are encoded by the electrically-stimulated neural ensembles. Non-invasive EEG measures of this encoding could help clinicians identify and disable electrodes that evoke poor neural respons...
NUTTALL, AL RICCI, AJ BURWOOD, G HARTE, JM STENFELT, S CAYE-THOMASEN, P REN, TY RAMAMOORTHY, S ZHANG, Y WILSON, T
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To understand speech, the slowly varying outline, or envelope, of the acoustic stimulus is used to distinguish words. A small amount of information about the envelope is sufficient for speech recognition, but the mechanism used by the auditory system to extract the envelope is not known. Several different theories have been proposed, including enve...
Goodman, Dan F M Winter, Ian M Léger, Agnès C de Cheveigné, Alain Lorenzi, Christian
Published in
Hearing research
The auditory system processes temporal information at multiple scales, and disruptions to this temporal processing may lead to deficits in auditory tasks such as detecting and discriminating sounds in a noisy environment. Here, a modelling approach is used to study the temporal regularity of firing by chopper cells in the ventral cochlear nucleus, ...