All Stories

  1. Toddlers' fast-mapping from noise-vocoded speech
  2. Perception of Child-Directed Versus Adult-Directed Emotional Speech in Pediatric Cochlear Implant Users
  3. How Vocal Emotions Produced by Children With Cochlear Implants Are Perceived by Their Hearing Peers
  4. A tonal-language benefit for pitch in normally-hearing and cochlear-implanted children
  5. Effects of Age and Hearing Loss on the Recognition of Emotions in Speech
  6. Perception and production of vocal emotions by listeners with normal hearing and with cochlear implants
  7. Modulation detection interference in cochlear implant listeners under forward masking conditions
  8. Similar abilities of musicians and non-musicians to segregate voices by fundamental frequency
  9. Voice emotion perception and production in cochlear implant users
  10. Processing of Acoustic Cues in Lexical-Tone Identification by Pediatric Cochlear-Implant Recipients
  11. Recovery from forward masking in cochlear implant listeners depends on stimulation mode, level, and electrode location
  12. Sequential stream segregation in normally-hearing and cochlear-implant listeners
  13. Band importance functions of listeners with cochlear implants using clinical maps
  14. Deficits in the Sensitivity to Pitch Sweeps by School-Aged Children Wearing Cochlear Implants
  15. Envelope Interactions in Multi-Channel Amplitude Modulation Frequency Discrimination by Cochlear Implant Users
  16. Fundamental-frequency discrimination using noise-band-vocoded harmonic complexes in older listeners with normal hearing
  17. Toddlers' comprehension of degraded signals: Noise-vocoded versus sine-wave analogs
  18. Voice emotion recognition by cochlear-implanted children and their normally-hearing peers
  19. How Noise and Language Proficiency Influence Speech Recognition by Individual Non-Native Listeners
  20. Phase effects in masking by harmonic complexes: Detection of bands of speech-shaped noise
  21. Deficits in the pitch sensitivity of cochlear-implanted children speaking English or Mandarin
  22. Roles of the target and masker fundamental frequencies in voice segregation
  23. T'ain't the way you say it, it's what you say – Perceptual continuity of voice and top–down restoration of speech
  24. Sensitivity to pulse phase duration in cochlear implant listeners: Effects of stimulation mode
  25. Speech recognition against harmonic and inharmonic complexes: Spectral dips and periodicity
  26. Robust cortical entrainment to the speech envelope relies on the spectro-temporal fine structure
  27. Phase effects in masking by harmonic complexes: Speech recognition
  28. Perceived listening effort for a tonal task with contralateral competing signals
  29. Roles of Voice Onset Time and F0 in Stop Consonant Voicing Perception: Effects of Masking Noise and Low-Pass Filtering
  30. Infants' name recognition in on- and off-channel noise
  31. Toddlers' recognition of noise-vocoded speech
  32. Toddlers' comprehension of noise-vocoded speech and sine-wave analogs to speech
  33. The use of auditory and visual context in speech perception by listeners with normal hearing and listeners with cochlear implants
  34. Acoustic Cue Integration in Speech Intonation Recognition With Cochlear Implants
  35. Sensitivity of school-aged children to pitch-related cues
  36. The use of acoustic cues for phonetic identification: Effects of spectral degradation and electric hearing
  37. Gender Identification in Younger and Older Adults
  38. Detection and rate discrimination of amplitude modulation in electrical hearing
  39. Recognition of temporally interrupted and spectrally degraded sentences with additional unprocessed low-frequency speech
  40. Recognition of interrupted sentences under conditions of spectral degradation
  41. A relation between electrode discrimination and amplitude modulation detection by cochlear implant listeners
  42. Effects of Cooperating and Conflicting Cues on Speech Intonation Recognition by Cochlear Implant Users and Normal Hearing Listeners
  43. Recognition of spectrally degraded phonemes by younger, middle-aged, and older normal-hearing listeners
  44. Processing F0 with cochlear implants: Modulation frequency discrimination and speech intonation recognition
  45. Auditory stream segregation with cochlear implants: A preliminary report
  46. Effects of Stimulation Mode, Level and Location on Forward-Masked Excitation Patterns in Cochlear Implant Patients
  47. Noise improves modulation detection by cochlear implant listeners at moderate carrier levels
  48. Across- and Within-Channel Envelope Interactions in Cochlear Implant Listeners
  49. Maturation of cochlear nonlinearity as measured by distortion product otoacoustic emission suppression growth in humans
  50. Modulation masking in cochlear implant listeners: envelope versus tonotopic components
  51. Noise Enhances Modulation Sensitivity in Cochlear Implant Listeners: Stochastic Resonance in a Prosthetic Sensory System?
  52. Effects of phase duration and electrode separation on loudness growth in cochlear implant listeners
  53. Temporal mechanisms underlying recovery from forward masking in multielectrode-implant listeners
  54. Effects of stimulation mode on threshold and loudness growth in multielectrode cochlear implants
  55. Cochlear mechanisms of frequency and intensity coding. II. Dynamic range and the code for loudness
  56. Forward masked excitation patterns in multielectrode electrical stimulation
  57. Within-channel gap detection using dissimilar markers in cochlear implant listeners
  58. Cochlear mechanisms of frequency and intensity coding. I. The place code for pitch
  59. Physiological overshoot and the compound action potential