All Stories

  1. Early maturation of sound duration processing in the infant’s brain
  2. Neural phoneme discrimination in variable speech in newborns – Associations with dyslexia risk and later language skills
  3. Prerequisites of language acquisition in the newborn brain
  4. Speech prosody supports speaker selection and auditory stream segregation in a multi-talker situation
  5. Longitudinal study of functional brain networks for processing infant directed and adult directed speech during the first year
  6. The effects of aging and hearing impairment on listening in noise
  7. Neural phoneme discrimination in variable speech in newborns – associations with dyslexia risk and later language skills
  8. Beat processing in newborn infants cannot be explained by statistical learning based on transition probabilities
  9. Do we parse the background into separate streams in the cocktail party?
  10. More efficient formation of longer-term representations for word forms at birth can be linked to better language skills at 2 years
  11. Editorial: Sensing the World Through Predictions and Errors
  12. Speech prosody supports speaker selection and auditory stream segregation in a multi-talker situation
  13. Relevance to the higher order structure may govern auditory statistical learning in neonates
  14. Do we parse the background into separate streams in the cocktail party?
  15. Shorter Contextual Timescale Rather Than Memory Deficit in Aging
  16. Word class and word frequency in the MMN looking glass
  17. Who said what? The effects of speech tempo on target detection and information extraction in a multi‐talker situation: An ERP and functional connectivity study
  18. Special Report on the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Clinical EEG and Research and Consensus Recommendations for the Safe Use of EEG
  19. The effects of speech processing units on auditory stream segregation and selective attention in a multi-talker (cocktail party) situation
  20. Spatial cues can support auditory figure-ground segregation
  21. Linguistic predictability influences auditory stimulus classification within two concurrent speech streams
  22. Setting precedent: Initial feature variability affects the subsequent precision of regularly varying sound contexts
  23. Short-term cognitive fatigue effect on auditory temporal order judgments
  24. Newborn infants differently process adult directed and infant directed speech
  25. Children’s perception of visual and auditory ambiguity and its link to executive functions and creativity
  26. Neuronal Correlates of Informational and Energetic Masking in the Human Brain in a Multi-Talker Situation
  27. Temporal boundary of auditory event formation: An electrophysiological marker
  28. Attention and speech-processing related functional brain networks activated in a multi-speaker environment
  29. The nonlinear effect of temporal proximity in auditory stream construction
  30. The cognitive resource and foreknowledge dependence of auditory perceptual inference
  31. The effects of attention and task-relevance on the processing of syntactic violations during listening to two concurrent speech streams
  32. Similar but separate systems underlie perceptual bistability in vision and audition
  33. Predictive coding in auditory perception: challenges and unresolved questions
  34. Functional brain networks underlying idiosyncratic switching patterns in multi-stable auditory perception
  35. Large-scale network organization of EEG functional connectivity in newborn infants
  36. Auditory multistability and neurotransmitter concentrations in the human brain
  37. Computational Models of Auditory Scene Analysis: A Review
  38. Order-driven effects in auditory evoked potentials: First-impression prediction bias or adaptation?
  39. Transitional Probabilities Are Prioritized over Stimulus/Pattern Probabilities in Auditory Deviance Detection: Memory Basis for Predictive Sound Processing
  40. Theta oscillations accompanying concurrent auditory stream segregation
  41. Promoting the perception of two and three concurrent sound objects: an event-related potential study
  42. Auditory Multi-Stability: Idiosyncratic Perceptual Switching Patterns, Executive Functions and Personality Traits
  43. Mismatch response (MMR) in neonates: Beyond refractoriness
  44. Surprising sequential effects on MMN
  45. Assessing the validity of subjective reports in the auditory streaming paradigm
  46. Biased relevance filtering in the auditory system: A test of confidence-weighted first-impressions
  47. Előbb az összetett, később az egyszerű: Csecsemők magasabb szintű hangfeldolgozási képességei a beszédértés előtti időszakban*
  48. Predictive processing of pitch trends in newborn infants
  49. Comparison of skewness-based salient event detector algorithms in speech
  50. Auditory perceptual objects as generative models: Setting the stage for communication by sound
  51. Differences between human auditory event-related potentials (AERPs) measured at 2 and 4months after birth
  52. Detecting the temporal structure of sound sequences in newborn infants
  53. Newborn Infants Detect Cues of Concurrent Sound Segregation
  54. Auditory Perceptual Organization
  55. Auditory Event-Related Potentials
  56. Title: Persistent order-driven biases in auditory relevance-filtering processes - a mismatch negativity (MMN) study.
  57. Processing of Horizontal Sound Localization Cues in Newborn Infants
  58. Do first-impression bias effects in mismatch negativity (MMN) diminish with repeated exposure to sound sequences?
  59. Presentation Order Modulates Responses to Standards and Deviant Tones in MMN paradigms.
  60. Feature Predictability Flexibly Supports Auditory Stream Segregation or Integration
  61. Effects of multiple congruent cues on concurrent sound segregation during passive and active listening: An event-related potential (ERP) study
  62. Mismatch negativity (MMN) to pitch change is susceptible to order-dependent bias
  63. Maternal mindfulness and anxiety during pregnancy affect infants’ neural responses to sounds
  64. Do audio-visual motion cues promote segregation of auditory streams?
  65. The effects of rhythm and melody on auditory stream segregation
  66. Altering the primacy bias-How does a prior task affect mismatch negativity?
  67. Stable individual characteristics in the perception of multiple embedded patterns in multistable auditory stimuli
  68. Auditory Perceptual Organization
  69. What controls gain in gain control? Mismatch negativity (MMN), priors and system biases
  70. Predictive Regularity Representations in Violation Detection and Auditory Stream Segregation: From Conceptual to Computational Models
  71. Foreground-background discrimination indicated by event-related brain potentials in a new auditory multistability paradigm
  72. Different roles of similarity and predictability in auditory stream segregation
  73. Perceptual bistability in auditory streaming: How much do stimulus features matter?
  74. Modulation-frequency acts as a primary cue for auditory stream segregation
  75. The role of perceived source location in auditory stream segregation: Separation affects sound organization, common fate does not
  76. Event-related potential correlates of sound organization: Early sensory and late cognitive effects
  77. Modelling the Emergence and Dynamics of Perceptual Organisation in Auditory Streaming
  78. Detecting violations of temporal regularities in waking and sleeping two-month-old infants
  79. Separating acoustic deviance from novelty during the first year of life: a review of event-related potential evidence
  80. Context effects on processing widely deviant sounds in newborn infants
  81. Predictive processes in perception
  82. Breaking Down Bias
  83. Processing of concurrent sounds in newborn infants
  84. A unified description of auditory deviance detection and auditory stream segregation
  85. Competition and cooperation in a model of auditory scene analysis
  86. Effects of attention and cue redundancy on concurrent sound segregation as evaluated with event-related potentials (ERPs)
  87. Auditory Event-related Potentials
  88. Modeling auditory stream segregation by predictive processes
  89. Impact of lower- vs. upper-hemifield presentation on automatic colour-deviance detection: A visual mismatch negativity study
  90. Competing predictive regularity representations in an abstract model of auditory stream segregation (CHAINS)
  91. Characterising switching behaviour in perceptual multi-stability
  92. Multistability in auditory stream segregation: a predictive coding view
  93. Introductory notes on “Predictive information processing in the brain: Principles, neural mechanisms, and models”
  94. Evidence from auditory and visual event-related potential (ERP) studies of deviance detection (MMN and vMMN) linking predictive coding theories and perceptual object representations
  95. Regularity Extraction from Non-Adjacent Sounds
  96. Recording Event-Related Brain Potentials: Application to Study Auditory Perception
  97. Preventing distraction: Assessing stimulus-specific and general effects of the predictive cueing of deviant auditory events
  98. CHAINS: Competition and cooperation between fragmentary event predictors in a Model of Auditory Scene Analysis
  99. A multimodal-corpus data collection system for cognitive acoustic scene analysis
  100. Regular patterns stabilize auditory streams
  101. Phase Entrainment of Human Delta Oscillations Can Mediate the Effects of Expectation on Reaction Speed
  102. Auditory processing that leads to conscious perception: A unique window to central auditory processing opened by the mismatch negativity and related responses
  103. Predictive models in auditory stream segregation
  104. In search for the prerequisites of stable auditory object perception
  105. Auditory processing leading to conscious perception: A unique window to central auditory processing opened by the mismatch negativity (MMN) and related responses
  106. Preventing distraction: Assessing stimulus-specific and general effects
  107. Visual Object Representations Can Be Formed outside the Focus of Voluntary Attention: Evidence from Event-related Brain Potentials
  108. Unconscious Memory Representations in Perception
  109. Probability dependence and functional separation of the object-related and mismatch negativity event-related potential components
  110. Distraction in a continuous-stimulation detection task
  111. Stability of Perceptual Organisation in Auditory Streaming
  112. 3. In search for auditory object representations
  113. Modeling the auditory scene: predictive regularity representations and perceptual objects
  114. Deviance detection in congruent audiovisual speech: Evidence for implicit integrated audiovisual memory representations
  115. Auditory size-deviant detection in adults and newborn infants
  116. Is Beat Induction Innate or Learned?
  117. I Heard That Coming: Event-Related Potential Evidence for Stimulus-Driven Prediction in the Auditory System
  118. Age-related differences in distraction and reorientation in an auditory task
  119. Probing Attentive and Preattentive Emergent Meter in Adult Listeners without Extensive Music Training
  120. Newborn infants detect the beat in music
  121. Newborn infants process pitch intervals
  122. Processing of rhythmic structures in adults and newborn babies
  123. Adult-like pitch processing skills in newborn infants
  124. Can we regard adaptation as memory?
  125. Timbre-independent extraction of pitch in newborn infants
  126. Do N1/MMN, P3a, and RON form a strongly coupled chain reflecting the three stages of auditory distraction?
  127. Units of sound representation and temporal integration: A mismatch negativity study
  128. Early differential processing of verbs and nouns in the human brain as indexed by event-related brain potentials
  129. Functional prerequisites of music perception in newborn infants: Mismatch negativity studies.
  130. ERRATUM
  131. MMN or no MMN: No magnitude of deviance effect on the MMN amplitude
  132. Auditory temporal grouping in newborn infants
  133. N1 and the mismatch negativity are spatiotemporally distinct ERP components: Disruption of immediate memory by auditory distraction can be related to N1
  134. Backward masking and visual mismatch negativity: Electrophysiological evidence for memory-based detection of deviant stimuli
  135. Processing acoustic change and novelty in newborn infants
  136. The temporal window of integration in elderly and young adults
  137. The development of the perceptual organization of sound by frequency separation in 5–11-year-old children
  138. Interpreting the Mismatch Negativity
  139. The role of attention in the formation of auditory streams
  140. Visual temporal window of integration as revealed by the visual mismatch negativity event-related potential to stimulus omissions
  141. Association between dopamine D4 receptor (DRD4) gene polymorphisms and novelty-elicited auditory event-related potentials in preschool children
  142. The role of predictive models in the formation of auditory streams
  143. Object representation in the human auditory system
  144. ERPs and deviance detection: Visual mismatch negativity to repeated visual stimuli
  145. Loudness summation and the mismatch negativity event-related brain potential in humans
  146. Familiarity Affects the Processing of Task-irrelevant Auditory Deviance
  147. Preattentive representation of feature conjunctions for concurrent spatially distributed auditory objects
  148. Event-related brain potentials reveal multiple stages in the perceptual organization of sound
  149. Auditory organization of sound sequences by a temporal or numerical regularity—a mismatch negativity study comparing musicians and non-musicians
  150. Preattentive Binding of Auditory and Visual Stimulus Features
  151. Disruption of immediate memory and brain processes: an auditory ERP protocol
  152. Memory-based or afferent processes in mismatch negativity (MMN): A review of the evidence
  153. From Sensory to Long-Term Memory
  154. Effects of temporal grouping on the memory representation of inter-tone relationships
  155. Long-term exposure to noise impairs cortical sound processing and attention control
  156. How the human auditory system treats repetition amongst change
  157. Grouping of Sequential Sounds—An Event-Related Potential Study Comparing Musicians and Nonmusicians
  158. Pre-attentive auditory processing of lexicality
  159. The N1 hypothesis and irrelevant sound: evidence from token set size effects
  160. Processing abstract auditory features in the human auditory cortex
  161. Human auditory cortex tracks task-irrelevant sound sources
  162. Test-retest reliability of auditory ERP components in healthy 6-year-old children
  163. Language context and phonetic change detection
  164. Newborn infants can organize the auditory world
  165. Electric brain responses indicate preattentive processing of abstract acoustic regularities in children
  166. Mismatch negativity to pitch change: varied stimulus proportions in controlling effects of neural refractoriness on human auditory event-related brain potentials
  167. Representation of the standard: Stimulus context effects on the process generating the mismatch negativity component of event-related brain potentials
  168. MMN and attention: Competition for deviance detection
  169. Spectral and temporal stimulus characteristics in the processing of abstract auditory features
  170. Change Detection in Complex Auditory Environment: Beyond the Oddball Paradigm
  171. Modeling the Modeling
  172. Temporal integration: intentional sound discrimination does not modulate stimulus-driven processes in auditory event synthesis
  173. Memory-based detection of task-irrelevant visual changes
  174. Simultaneous storage of two complex temporal sound patterns in auditory sensory memory
  175. Temporary and longer term retention of acoustic information
  176. Top-down effects can modify the initially stimulus-driven auditory organization
  177. Dynamic sensory updating in the auditory system
  178. Event-related potential correlates of sound duration: similar pattern from birth to adulthood
  179. Simultaneously active pre-attentive representations of local and global rules for sound sequences in the human brain
  180. Mismatch negativity is unaffected by top-down predictive information
  181. Common neural mechanism for processing onset-to-onset intervals and silent gaps in sound sequences
  182. ‘Primitive intelligence’ in the auditory cortex
  183. Organizing sound sequences in the human brain: the interplay of auditory streaming and temporal integration
  184. Auditory stream segregation processes operate similarly in school-aged children and adults
  185. Preattentive extraction of abstract feature conjunctions from auditory stimulation as reflected by the mismatch negativity (MMN)
  186. Preattentive extraction of abstract feature conjunctions from auditory stimulation as reflected by the mismatch negativity (MMN)
  187. Changes in acoustic features and their conjunctions are processed by separate neuronal populations
  188. The Role of Large-Scale Memory Organization in the Mismatch Negativity Event-Related Brain Potential
  189. The brain recognizes familiar phonotactics in a foreign environment
  190. Preattentive processing of spectral, temporal, and structural characteristics of acoustic regularities: A mismatch negativity study
  191. Preattentive processing of spectral, temporal, and structural characteristics of acoustic regularities: A mismatch negativity study
  192. Involuntary Attention and Distractibility as Evaluated with Event-Related Brain Potentials
  193. Brain responses reveal the learning of foreign language phonemes
  194. Brain responses reveal the learning of foreign language phonemes
  195. Event-related brain potentials reveal covert distractibility in closed head injuries
  196. Independent processing of changes in auditory single features and feature conjunctions in humans as indexed by the mismatch negativity
  197. Temporal integration of auditory stimulus deviance as reflected by the mismatch negativity
  198. Neuronal populations in the human brain extracting invariant relationships from acoustic variance
  199. Pre-attentive detection of vowel contrasts utilizes both phonetic and auditory memory representations
  200. The concept of auditory stimulus representation in cognitive neuroscience.
  201. The concept of auditory stimulus representation in cognitive neuroscience.
  202. Neural Mechanisms of Involuntary Attention to Acoustic Novelty and Change
  203. Combined mapping of human auditory EEG and MEG responses
  204. Processing of novel sounds and frequency changes in the human auditory cortex: Magnetoencephalographic recordings
  205. Processing of novel sounds and frequency changes in the human auditory cortex: Magnetoencephalographic recordings
  206. Preattentive processing of auditory spatial information in humans
  207. Temporal constraints of auditory event synthesis
  208. Two separate codes for missing-fundamental pitch in the human auditory cortex
  209. Pre-attentive categorization of sounds by timbre as revealed by event-related potentials
  210. Adaptive modeling of the unattended acoustic environment reflected in the mismatch negativity event-related potential
  211. Preattentive auditory change detection relies on unitary sensory memory representations
  212. Interactions between Transient and Long-Term Auditory Memory as Reflected by the Mismatch Negativity
  213. Effects of ethanol and auditory distraction on forced choice reaction time
  214. From objective to subjective
  215. Presentation rate and magnitude of stimulus deviance effects on human pre-attentive change detection
  216. Neural representation for the temporal structure of sound patterns
  217. Event-related brain potentials reflect traces of echoic memory in humans
  218. Memory prerequisites of mismatch negativity in the auditory event-related potential (ERP).
  219. Event-related potentials in auditory backward recognition masking: A new way to study the neurophysiological basis of sensory memory in humans
  220. Can Echoic Memory Store Two Traces Simultaneously? A Study of Event-Related Brain Potentials
  221. Mismatch negativity in auditory recognition masking
  222. The Effect of Small Variation of the Frequent Auditory Stimulus on the Event-Related Brain Potential to the Infrequent Stimulus
  223. Intracortical auditory evoked potentials during classical aversive conditioning in cats