All Stories

  1. Preschoolers' Word-Learning During Storybook Reading Interactions: Comparing Repeated and Elaborated Input
  2. Enduring Cognitive and Linguistic Deficits in Individuals With a History of Concussion
  3. Heart and ____ or Give and ____? An Exploration of Variables That Influence Binomial Completion for Individuals With and Without Aphasia
  4. The effects of concussion on rapid picture naming in children
  5. Influence of Lexical Factors on Word-Finding Accuracy, Error Patterns, and Substitution Types
  6. Cochlear-implant users adjust to speaking rate better than people with typical hearing
  7. Effect of the relationship between target and masker sex on infants' recognition of speech
  8. Toddlers' comprehension of degraded signals: Noise-vocoded versus sine-wave analogs
  9. Input and uptake at 7 months predicts toddler vocabulary: the role of child-directed speech and infant processing skills in language development
  10. Age-Related Differences in Speech Rate Perception Do Not Necessarily Entail Age-Related Differences in Speech Rate Use
  11. Linguistically-based informational masking in preschool children
  12. Look at the gato! Code-switching in speech to toddlers
  13. Toddlers' ability to map the meaning of new words in multi-talker environments
  14. Canadian oats and Canadian goats: Comparing distal cues to segmentation and segments
  15. Toddlers' comprehension of noise-vocoded speech and sine-wave analogs to speech
  16. Infants' name recognition in on- and off-channel noise
  17. Canadian oats and Canadian goats: Comparing distal cues to segmentation and segments
  18. Toddlers' recognition of noise-vocoded speech
  19. Toddlers' comprehension of noise-vocoded speech and sine-wave analogs to speech
  20. Verb Comprehension and Use in Children and Adults With Down Syndrome
  21. Children's Restoration of Temporally Reversed Speech
  22. Identifying Talkers in Other Languages & Dialects: The Role of Language Rhythm
  23. Development of Speech Perception
  24. Cues and cue interactions in segmenting words in fluent speech
  25. 2-Year-Olds’ Speech Understanding in Multitalker Environments
  26. Perceptual learning of talker‐idiosyncratic phonetic cues.
  27. Voice onset time in infant‐directed speech at 7.5 and 11 months.
  28. Infants’ ability to recognize speech in the presence of amplitude‐modulated background noise.
  29. Longitudinal analysis of vowels in infant‐directed speech.
  30. Effects of word frequency and phonological neighborhood characteristics on confrontation naming in children who stutter and normally fluent peers
  31. Infants’ listening in multitalker environments: Effect of the number of background talkers
  32. Lexical access across different voices.
  33. Lexical access across talker changes: Does his "cap" and her "size" refer to boats?
  34. Perceptual normalization for speaking rate III: Effects of the rate of one voice on perception of another
  35. The Level of Detail in Infants' Word Learning
  36. Oral Reading Skills of Children with Oral Language (Word-Finding) Difficulties
  37. The Role of Selected Lexical Factors on Confrontation Naming Accuracy, Speed, and Fluency in Adults Who Do and Do Not Stutter
  38. The effect of talker familiarity on stream segregation
  39. Changes in Preference for Infant-Directed Speech in Low and Moderate Noise by 4.5- to 13-Month-Olds
  40. Perceptual restoration in toddlers
  41. Local versus distal speaking‐rate normalization effects
  42. The time course of cross‐voice speaking rate normalization
  43. Infant’s perception of speech in noise: Effect of the number of background talkers
  44. Infants' ability to recognize speech in noise: Effects of noise type and location
  45. Infants' early ability to segment the conversational speech signal predicts later language development: A retrospective analysis.
  46. Do postonset segments define a lexical neighborhood?
  47. Infants' Use of Synchronized Visual Information to Separate Streams of Speech
  48. The Cocktail Party Effect in Infants Revisited: Listening to One's Name in Noise.
  49. Space aliens and nonwords: Stimuli for investigating the learning of novel word-meaning pairs
  50. Perceptual restoration in children versus adults
  51. Prosodic differences in mothers' speech to toddlers in quiet and noisy environments
  52. Using links between speech perception and speech production to evaluate different acoustic metrics: A preliminary report
  53. Infants in cocktail parties
  54. Does an infant‐directed speaking style aid in the separation of different streams of speech?
  55. Children's use of the prosodic characteristics of infant-directed speech
  56. Speaking rate adjustment across changes in talker
  57. The effect of familiarity with a voice on continuous shadowing: Effects of explicit knowledge, but not of implicit familiarity
  58. Talker and speaking rate variation affect lexical neighborhoods
  59. Infants use of visual information in speech segmentation
  60. The basic units of rate normalization
  61. Infant‐directed speech helps adults separate different streams of speech
  62. The perceptual consequences of within-talker variability in fricative production
  63. Talker voice and similarity affect lexical neighborhoods
  64. Not all neighborhood effects are created equal
  65. The relative time course of neighborhood and lexical effects
  66. Phoneme restoration in infants
  67. Perceptual normalization for speaking rate II: Effects of signal discontinuities
  68. The basic units of rate normalization
  69. The perceptual consequences of overlap in /s/ and /∫/ productions within a talker
  70. What is a neighbor in a neighborhood effect? Items that mismatch on the first phoneme still produce neighborhood effects
  71. Individual differences and the link between speech perception and speech production
  72. Similarity scaling for consonants and consonant clusters in initial position
  73. Variability in /s/ and /S−P174n/ productions within and across talkers
  74. Lexical neighborhood effects in phonetic processing.
  75. The cocktail party effect in infants
  76. Perceptual normalization for speaking rate: Effects of temporal distance
  77. Possible word boundary constraints on multiple activation of form‐based representations of spoken words.
  78. Individual differences and the perception‐production link.
  79. The cocktail party effect in infants
  80. Are coronals different? The influence of the lexicon on coronal identification
  81. The time course of neighborhood and lexical effects in phoneme identification
  82. Lexical effects in nonwords?
  83. Assimilative and contrast effects of speaking rate on speech perception