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Subject Areas on Research
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A tale of two theories: response to Fisher.
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Adult age differences in long-term semantic priming.
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Age-related differences in resolving semantic and phonological competition during receptive language tasks.
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Age-related differences in the neural bases of phonological and semantic processes in the context of task-irrelevant information.
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Age-related differences in the neural bases of phonological and semantic processes.
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Asymmetry of neuronal activity during extracellular microelectrode recording from left and right human temporal lobe neocortex during rhyming and line-matching.
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Auditory-Perceptual Speech Features in Children With Down Syndrome.
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Bootstrapping word order in prelexical infants: a Japanese-Italian cross-linguistic study.
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Defining the broader phenotype of autism: genetic, brain, and behavioral perspectives.
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Design for an inexpensive but effective cochlear implant.
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Developmental increases in effective connectivity to brain regions involved in phonological processing during tasks with orthographic demands.
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Discrimination of phonemic vowel length by Japanese infants.
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Error patterns in young German children's wh-questions.
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Evaluation of different choices of n in an n of m processor for cochlear implants.
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Influence of encoding difficulty, word frequency, and phonological regularity on age differences in word naming.
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Investigation of the effects of temporal and spatial interactions on speech-recognition skills in cochlear-implant subjects.
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Language-general biases and language-specific experience contribute to phonological detail in toddlers' word representations.
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Learning phonemic vowel length from naturalistic recordings of Japanese infant-directed speech.
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Manipulating stored phonological input during verbal working memory.
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Mothers speak less clearly to infants than to adults: a comprehensive test of the hyperarticulation hypothesis.
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Musical intervals in speech.
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New processing strategies in cochlear implantation.
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On the independence of physical and nominal codes: a correlational analysis.
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Phonemic fluency and brain connectivity in age-related macular degeneration: a pilot study.
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Phonological theory informs the analysis of intonational exaggeration in Japanese infant-directed speech.
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Predicting which words get recalled: measures of free recall, availability, goodness, emotionality, and pronunciability for 925 nouns.
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Processing two dimensions of nonspeech stimuli: the auditory-phonetic distinction reconsidered.
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Reduced P3 amplitude of the event-related brain potential: its relationship to language ability in autism.
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Single-sensor multispeaker listening with acoustic metamaterials.
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Speech segmentation by native and non-native speakers: the use of lexical, syntactic, and stress-pattern cues.
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Surgical variables affecting speech in treated patients with oral and oropharyngeal cancer.
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The abstraction of form in semantic categories.
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The development of a phonological illusion: a cross-linguistic study with Japanese and French infants.
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The development of memory maintenance: children's use of phonological rehearsal and attentional refreshment in working memory tasks.
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The labial-coronal effect revisited: Japanese adults say pata, but hear tapa.
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The statistical structure of human speech sounds predicts musical universals.
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The unexplained nature of reading.
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Two-year-olds use primary sentence accent to learn new words.
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Understanding of speaker certainty and false-belief reasoning: a comparison of Japanese and German preschoolers.
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When context is and isn't helpful: A corpus study of naturalistic speech.
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Word recognition for temporally and spectrally distorted materials: the effects of age and hearing loss.
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Young Infants' Word Comprehension Given An Unfamiliar Talker or Altered Pronunciations.