

All of their research studies were submitted for peer-review program, and 3, Emma Brothers, Kristie Roberts, and Abigail Stecker are in the Au.D. Lipika Sarangi and Rachel Huber, are currently in the Ph.D. Of science to clinical practice in hearing and balance disorders. The mission of AAS is to promote the translation Motor speech disorders." This talk will take place in San Diego, CA, at the 2020 ASHAĬonvention in November, and will be co-presented with Erin Ingvalson, Associate Professorįive students presented the results of research conducted under the direction of Jani Johnson, Au.D., Ph,D., at the Annual Scientific and Technology Conference of the American Auditory Society On the topic of "Cognition: A source of detours in the perception and production of Invited by ASHA's 2020 Motor Speech Disorders Topic Committee to give a 1-hour presentation Lynda Feenaughty, Ph.D., Assistant Professor in the School of Communication Sciences and Disorders, has been The authors suggest infant boys may vocalize more, in part because they areĪt higher risk for death than girls in the first year, and that they may have beenĮvolved to produce more speech-like vocalizations to serve as elicitors of parental Risk for autism (because they had an older sibling with autism) and infants not at Importantly the difference in vocal rates favoring boys applied both to infants at Speech-like vocalizations than girls and that the difference is not only highly significantīut also more than four times larger than the commonly reported female language advantage. The new study in Current Biology reveals that in the first year boys produce more

With colleagues from the University of Memphis and Gordon Ramsay of Emory UniversityĪlthough females have been reported for decades to be better in language than males, Kim Oller published a paper titled " Infant boys are more vocal than infant girls" that appeared in the high-impact journal, Current Biology. Psychobiological responses reveal audiovisual noise differentially challenges speech Journal of Neural Engineering, 17(1), 016045.īidelman, G. That drive rapid speech categorization decisions. Decoding of single-trial EEG reveals unique states of functional brain connectivity Frontiers in Neuroscience, 14(153), 1-13.Īl-Fahad, R., Yeasin, M., & Bidelman, G. Effects of noise on the behavioral and neural categorization of speech. Brainstem correlates of cochlear nonlinearity measured via the scalp-recordedįrequency-following response (FFR). Gavin Bidelman authored four new research publications:īidelman, G. Lisa Lucks Mendel was recently published in the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.ĭr. The article " Semantic Influences on the Perception of Degraded Speech by Individuals with Cochlear Picture Identification Test (SPPIT)" accepted for publication in the American Journal Speech Perception Assessment Laboratory (SPAL) had the manuscript "The Spanish Pediatric Jude Children's Research Hospital and the Her master's thesis on " The Relation Between Eating Disorders and Voice Disorders" in the Journal of Voice.Ī collaborative research study with St. Miriam van Mersbergen, Assistant Professor in the School of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, published Taylor Lawrence, a recent graduate, and Dr. School of Communication Sciences and Disordersįaculty Updates Faculty Updates Publications
