A piece in Volkskrant where Deniz explains why one’s recorded voice sounds strange to themselves, and also a few lines about our new voice perception research.
A piece in Volkskrant where Deniz explains why one’s recorded voice sounds strange to themselves, and also a few lines about our new voice perception research.
The degree and time course of benefit for cochlear implantation for patients with single-sided deafness depends on the point of reference
Dr. John Galvin
House Ear Institute, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Date: 22 June 2018, FRIDAY
Time: 10:00 hr (PLEASE NOTE DIFFERING TIME)
Location: UMCG, KNO Colloquium P3.210
Broadcasting link: https://tinyurl.com/22-06-18-AudSeminar
Broadcasting link: https://tinyurl.com/25-05-18-AudSeminar
Dr. Edmund Lalor
University of Rochester
Abstract
How the human brain extracts meaning from the dynamic patterns of sound that constitute speech remains poorly understood. This is especially true in natural environments where the speech signal has to be processed against a complex mixture of background sounds. In this talk I will outline efforts over the last few years to derive noninvasive indices of natural speech processing in the brain. I will discuss how these indices are affected by attention and visual input and how attentional selection and multisensory integration can be “decoded” from EEG data. I will outline work showing that EEG and MEG are sensitive not just to the low-level acoustic properties of speech, but also to higher-level linguistic aspects of this most important of signals. This will include demonstrating that these signals reflect processing at the level of phonetic features. And, based on our most recent work, it will also include evidence that EEG is exquisitely sensitivity to the semantic processing of natural, running speech in a way that is very strongly affected by attention and intelligibility. While showcasing these findings, I will outline a number of paradigms and methodological approaches for eliciting noninvasive indices of speech-specific processing that should be useful in advancing our understanding of receptive speech processing in particular populations.
Deniz is elected to a Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America, “For contributions to our understanding of acoustic and electric auditory and speech perception.” Link here.
The team from 3D Tune-In, an H2020 project where Deniz is acting as an external reviewer, is organizing an interesting event at V&A (18 April). Everyone is invited!
link:
https://www.vam.ac.uk/event/VGaQ68GZ/digital-futures-hearing-futures-2018
Deniz will be co-chairing CIAP 2019 along with Karen Gordon. The initial program is currently put together, will be a very exciting meeting!
See the previous program here:
http://www.ciaphome.org/index.html
Broadcasting link: https://tinyurl.com/06-02-18-AudSeminar
Dr. Jane Opie
Med-El
Broadcasting link: https://tinyurl.com/26-01-2017-AudSeminar
Dr. Paddy Boyle
Senior Director
Global Research
Advanced Bionics
Broadcasting link: https://tinyurl.com/19-01-18-AudSeminar
Dr. Carlos Trenado
Institute of Clinical Neuroscience and Medical Psychology, University Hospital Düsseldorf & Dept. of Psychology and Neurosciences, Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors, Technical University Dortmund, Germany