Kyushu University Academic Staff Educational and Research Activities Database
List of Presentations
Kazuo UEDA Last modified date:2024.04.12

Associate Professor / Perceptual Psychology / Department of Acoustic Design / Faculty of Design


Presentations
1. Kazuo Ueda, Linh Le Dieu Doan, and Hiroshige Takeichi, Checkerboard and interrupted speech: Critical intelligibility differences observed in factor-analysis-based checkerboard speech stimuli, Acoustics 2023 Sydney, the 185th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, 2023.12.
2. Kazuo Ueda, Masashi Hashimoto, Hiroshige Takeichi, and Kohei Wakamiya, Interrupted mosaic speech revisited: Gain and loss of stretching on intelligibility, Acoustics 2023 Sydney, the 185th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, 2023.12.
3. Jun Hasegawa, Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, Gerard B. Remijn, and Emi Hasuo, Selective Listening in Checkerboard and Interrupted Speech Stimuli with Two Talkers, Acoustics 2023 Sydney, the 185th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, 2023.12.
4. Gerard B. Remijn, Ryuji Takahashi, and Kazuo Ueda, Summary statistics for music scale tones: The influence of the interstimulus interval between the stimulus set and the comparison tone, 日本音響学会聴覚研究会, 2023.12.
5. Kazuo Ueda, Masashi Hashimoto, Hiroshige Takeichi, and Kohei Wakamiya, Interrupted mosaic speech revisited: A curious biphasic effect of stretching on intelligibility, Fechner Day 2023: The 39th Annual Meeting for the International Society for Psychophysics, 2023.09.
6. Alexandra Wolf, Shunsuke Tamura, Takako Mitsudo, Kazuo Ueda, and Yoji Hirano, Altered information processing strategy among patients with schizophrenia in a liking task: an eye movement study, Fechner Day 2023: The 39th Annual Meeting for the International Society for Psychophysics, 2023.09.
7. Hiroshige Takeichi, Kazuo Ueda, Takako Mitsudo, Alexandra Wolf, and Yoji Hirano, Magnetoencephalography of checkerboard speech processing, Fechner Day 2023: The 39th Annual Meeting for the International Society for Psychophysics, 2023.09.
8. Koutaro Munechika, Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, and Gerard B. Remijn, Phonemic restoration and energetic masking with checkerboard speech stimuli: Effects of noise-filling on intelligibility, Fechner Day 2023: The 39th Annual Meeting for the International Society for Psychophysics, 2023.09.
9. Jun Hasegawa, Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, Gerard B. Remijn, and Emi Hasuo, Selective Listening in Checkerboard and Interrupted Japanese Speech Stimuli with Two Talkers, 日本音響学会秋季研究発表会, 2023.09.
10. Gerard B. Remijn, Masaki Teramachi, Ryuji Takahashi, Kazuo Ueda, Summary statistics in hearing: Average pitch estimation from a sequence of tones by listeners with and without absolute pitch, ICMPC17-APSCOM7, 2023.08.
11. Geng-Yan JHANG, Kazuo UEDA, Hiroshige TAKEICHI, Gerard B. REMIJN, The rivalry between fundamental frequency separation and switching frequency bands for auditory stream segregation in harmonic complex tone sequences, ICMPC17-APSCOM7, 2023.08.
12. Jun Hasegawa, Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, Gerard B. Remijn, and Emi Hasuo, Selective listening in checkerboard and interrupted speech stimuli with two talkers, 日本音響学会聴覚研究会, 2023.06.
13. Interrupted and stretched mosaic speech: Dissociating the effect of interruption from the temporal resolution degradation on intelligibility in interrupted and stretched mosaic speech.
14. Kimiko Negi, Gerard B. Remijn, Yoshitaka Nakajima, and Kazuo Ueda, Analysis of enhanced speech quality using correspondence analysis, ASJ Auditory Research Meeting, 2022.12, [URL].
15. Hiroshige Takeichi, Kazuo Ueda, Takako Mitsudo, Alexandra Wolf, and Yoji Hirano, Magnetoencephalography elucidates processing mosaic and checkerboard speech, ASJ Auditory Research Meeting, 2022.12, [URL].
16. Koutaro Munechika, Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, and Gerard B. Remijn, Phonemic restoration and energetic masking with checkerboard speech stimuli, ASJ Auditory Research Meeting, 2022.12, [URL].
17. Linh Doan, Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, and Gerard B. Remijn, A trough in intelligibility curves for checkerboard speech stimuli with four and eight frequency bands, ASJ Auditory Research Meeting, 2022.12, [URL].
18. Geng-Yan Jhang, Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, and Gerard B. Remijn, Auditory stream segregation for complex tones with switching frequency bands: Rivaling factors for segregation, ASJ Auditory Research Meeting, 2022.12, [URL].
19. Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, Regaining intelligibility of interrupted mosaic speech by stretching, 日本心理学会第86回大会, 2022.09.
20. Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, Kohei Wakamiya, and Gerard B. Remijn, Auditory grouping by stretching: Regaining intelligibility of interrupted mosaic speech stimuli, 日本音響学会秋季研究発表会, 2022.09.
21. Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, and Kohei Wakamiya, Auditory grouping is necessary to understand interrupted mosaic speech stimuli, Acoustical Society of America, P&P Virtual Journal Club, 2022.09, [URL], The intelligibility of interrupted speech stimuli has been known to be almost perfect when segment duration is shorter than 80 ms, which means that the interrupted segments are perceptually organized into a coherent stream under this condition. However, why listeners can successfully group the interrupted segments into a coherent stream has been largely unknown. Here, we show that the intelligibility for mosaic speech in which original speech was segmented in frequency and time and noise-vocoded with the average power in each unit was largely reduced by periodical interruption. At the same time, the intelligibility could be recovered by promoting auditory grouping of the interrupted segments by stretching the segments up to 40 ms and reducing the gaps, provided that the number of frequency bands was enough (>= 4) and the original segment duration was equal to or less than 40 ms. The interruption was devastating for mosaic speech stimuli, very likely because the deprivation of periodicity and temporal fine structure with mosaicking prevented successful auditory grouping for the interrupted segments..
22. Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, and Kohei Wakamiya, Auditory grouping facilitates understanding interrupted mosaic speech stimuli, Fechner Day 2022: The 38th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2022.08.
23. Linh Doan, Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, and Gerard B. Remijn, Checkerboard speech: A trough in the intelligibility curves, Fechner Day 2022: The 38th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2022.08.
24. Geng-Yan Jhang, Kazuo Ueda, Hiroshige Takeichi, and Gerard B. Remijn, Auditory stream segregation for complex tones with switching frequency bands, Fechner Day 2022: The 38th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2022.08.
25. Hiroshige Takeichi, Kazuo Ueda, Takako Mitsudo, Alexandra Wolf, and Yoji Hirano, Magnetoencephalography of processing mosaic and checkerboard speech, Fechner Day 2022: The 38th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2022.08.
26. Alexandra Wolf, Shunsuke Tamura, Takako Mitsudo, Kazuo Ueda, and Yoji Hirano, Information processing abnormalities among patients with schizophrenia in a decision-making task, Fechner Day 2022: The 38th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2022.08.
27. Pitch Perception by Absolute Pitch Possessors and Non-Possessors: The Use of Summary Statistics.
28. Checkerboard speech: Troughs in intelligibility at the 160-ms segment duration.
29. Intelligibility of interrupted speech alternating with band-noises.
30. Kazuo Ueda, Riina Kawakami, Hiroshige Takeichi, Checkerboard Speech: A New Experimental Paradigm for Investigating Speech Perception, Fechner Day 2021: The 57th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2021.10, [URL].
31. Wolf, A., Ueda, K., and Hirano, Y., Eye movement abnormalities among patients with schizophrenia, Fechner Day 2021: The 57th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2021.10, [URL].
32. Zhang, Y., Nakajima, Y., Ueda, K., and Remijn, G. B., Acoustic correlates of English consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC) words obtained with multivariate analysis, Fechner Day 2021: The 57th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2021.10, [URL].
33. Nakajima, Y., Onaka, T., Oyama, A., Ueda, K., and Remijn, G. B., Temporal and frequency resolution needed for auditory communication: Comparison between young and senior listeners utilizing mosaic speech, Fechner Day 2021: The 57th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2021.10, [URL].
34. Intelligibility of chimeric locally time-reversed speech: Relative contribution of four frequency bands revealed with confusion analyses.
35. Perception of checkerboard speech: Limitations in auditory organization contrasted with the organization for interrupted speech.
36. Perception of checkerboard speech and interrupted speech.
37. Alexandra Wolf, Kazuo Ueda, and Yoji Hirano, Eye-Movement Abnormalities among Patients with Schizophrenia, the 43rd European Conference on Visual Perception (ECVP 2021), 2021.08, [URL].
38. Kazuo UEDA, Riina KAWAKAMI, Hiroshige TAKEICHI, Checkerboard speech, The 52nd Perceptual Frontier Seminar: Non-Invasive Exploration of the Brain with Visual, Tactile, and Auditory Stimuli, 2021.05, [URL], "Checkerboard speech" is a kind of degraded speech discarding 50% of original speech, to study spectrotemporal characteristics of speech perception. Here we show that 20-band checkerboard speech maintained nearly 100% intelligibility irrespective of segment duration in the range from 20 to 320 ms, whereas 2- and 4-band checkerboard speech showed a trough of 35% to 40% intelligibility between the segment durations of 80 and 160 ms (n = 2 and n = 20), and that mosaicked checkerboard speech stimuli showed less than 10% intelligibility except for the stimuli with the finest resolution (20 frequency bands and 20-ms segment duration). The results suggest close connections with the modulation power spectrums of the stimuli, a spectrotemporal interaction in speech perception, and perceptual cue integration based on temporal fine structure..
39. Combined Effects of Temporal and Spectral Segmentation on Intelligibility of Degraded Speech.
40. Hikaru EGUCHI, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Locally time-scrambled mosaic speech, 日本音響学会聴覚研究会, 2019.12.
41. Kazuo Ueda, Valter Ciocca, Gerard B. Remijn, and Yoshitaka Nakajima, Perceptual restoration of interrupted locally time-reversed speech: Effects of noise levels and segment duration, Fechner Day 2019: the 35th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2019.10.
42. Kazuo Ueda, Valter Ciocca, Gerard B. Remijn, and Yoshitaka Nakajima, Perceptual restoration of interrupted locally time-reversed speech: Effects of noise levels, The 83rd Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association, 2019.09.
43. Kazuo Ueda, Factor analysis of speech and an acoustic language universal, Research Colloquium at Technische Universität Darmstadt, 2018.12.
44. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Florian KATTNER, Wolfgang ELLERMEIER, Irrelevant sound effects with locally time-reversed speech: Native vs. non-native language, The 176th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America and 2018 Acoustics Week in Canada in Victoria, Canada, 2018.11.
45. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Florian KATTNER, Wolfgang ELLERMEIER, Irrelevant sound effects with locally time-reversed speech: Native vs. non-native language with German and Japanese participants, Lunch talk in Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, 2018.11.
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48. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Florian KATTNER, Wolfgang ELLERMEIER, Irrelevant sound effects with locally time-reversed speech: Speech reversal and language familiarity, 日本心理学会第 82 回大会, 2018.09.
49. Blanco, L., Fuyuno, M., Remijn, G.B., Ueda, K., Tomotari, M., Nakajima, Y., The application of a 360-degree video as a tool for standardized language testing material, The 3rd International Five-Sense Symposium, 2018.09.
50. Kishida, T., Nakajima, Y., Ueda, K., Remijn, G.B., Umemoto, S., Effects on number of factors and factor elimination on intelligibility of noise-vocoded Japanese speech perception, The 3rd International Five-Sense Symposium, 2018.09.
51. Irrelevant sound effects with locally time-reversed speech: Effects of native language.
52. Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard Remijn, Yuko Yamashita, Takuya KISHIDA, Phonology and psychophysics: Is sonority real?, Fechner Day 2017 : The 33rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2017.10.
53. Kaori Kojima, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Kazuo Ueda, Gerard B. Remijn, Mark A. Elliott, and Sophia Arndt, Influence of the temporal-unit duration on the intelligibility of mosaic speech: A comparison between Japanese and English, Fechner Day 2017 : The 33rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2017.10.
54. Miki Hokajo, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Kazuo Ueda, Chirio Hiramatsu, Moe Nishikawa, and Gerard B. Remijn, A case study on synesthesia: Is there a connection between Japanese hiragana-katakana articulation categories and color grouping?, Fechner Day 2017 : The 33rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2017.10.
55. Hiroaki Yano, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Kazuo Ueda, Tatsuya Yoshizawa, and Gerard B. Remijn, Multi-stable motion perception in the Polka dance stimulus, Fechner Day 2017 : The 33rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2017.10.
56. Jo¥~{a}o Paulo Cabral, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Kazuo Ueda, Gerard B. Remijn, The perception and recognition of auditory icons by Japanese drivers, Fechner Day 2017 : The 33rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2017.10.
57. Kazuo Ueda, Nozomi Inui, Kaisei Shiraki, Valter Ciocca, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Gerard Remijn, Perceptual restoration of interrupted locally time-reversed speech, Fechner Day 2017 : The 33rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2017.10.
58. Kazuo UEDA, Akie Shibata, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Katharina Rost, Florian Kattner, Wolfgang Ellermeier, Irrelevant sound effects with locally time-reversed speech: Real performance difference between German and Japanese native speakers?, Fechner Day 2017 : The 33rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2017.10.
59. Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Mizuki Matsuda, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard Remijn, Temporal resolution needed for auditory communication: Measurement with mosaic speech, Fechner Day 2017 : The 33rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2017.10.
60. Takuya KISHIDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard Remijn, Sophia Arndt, Mark A. Elliott, Intelligibility of English noise-vocoded speech resynthesized from spectral-change factors, Fechner Day 2017 : The 33rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2017.10.
61. Wolfgang Ellermeier, Florian Kattner, Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Irrelevant sound effects with locally time-reversed speech, Fechner Day 2017 : The 33rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2017.10.
62. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Demonstrations of Locally Time-Reversed Choral Music in Four Different Languages, The 6th Conference of the Asia-Pacific Society for the Cognitive Sciences of Music, 2017.08.
63. Noise-vocoded speech resynthesized from critical-band power-fluctuation factors: The effect of factor elimination on speech intelligibility.
64. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Wolfgang ELLERMEIER, Florian KATTNER, Intelligibility of locally time-reversed speech: A multilingual comparison with normalizing speech rates, 日本音響学会春季研究発表会, 2017.03.
65. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Wolfgang ELLERMEIER, Florian KATTNER, Intelligibility of locally time-reversed speech in four languages: Chinese, English, German, and Japanese, The 29th Perceptual Frontier Seminar: Poster Symposium in Summer, 2016.08.
66. Takuya KISHIDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard Remijn, Effects of factor elimination on intelligibility of noise-vocoded Japanese speech, The 31st International Congress of Psychology 2016 (ICP2016), 2016.07.
67. Hiroaki YANO, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard Remijn, The effect of sound on visual grouping in a multi-stable stimulus, The 31st International Congress of Psychology 2016 (ICP2016), 2016.07.
68. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Shunsuke TAMURA, Akihiko SHICHIDA, Wolfgang ELLERMEIER, Florian KATTNER, Stephan DAEBLER, Ngar Nie NEO, Intelligibility of locally time-reversed speech in Chinese, English, German, and Japanese, The 31st International Congress of Psychology 2016 (ICP2016), 2016.07.
69. Asuka ONO, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard Remijn, The speech-to-song illusion in Japanese, The 31st International Congress of Psychology 2016 (ICP2016), 2016.07.
70. Kunito IIDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Yukihiro SERIZAWA, Effects of the duration and the frequency of temporal gaps on the subjective distortedness of music fragments, ICMPC14, the 14th International Conference for Music Perception and Cognition, 2016.07.
71. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Wolfgang ELLERMEIER, Florian KATTNER, A multilingual comparison of intelligibility in locally time-reversed speech, 日本音響学会聴覚研究会, 2016.05.
72. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Shunsuke TAMURA, Akihiko SHICHIDA, Wolfgang ELLERMEIER, Florian KATTNER, Stephan DAEBLER, Ngar Nie NEO, Intelligibility of locally time-reversed speech in four different languages, The 2nd Annual Meeting of the Society for Bioacoustics, 2015.12.
73. Kazuo Ueda, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Shunsuke Tamura, Akihiko Shichida, Wolfgang Ellermeier, Florian Kattner, Stephan Daebler, Ngar Nie Neo, Intelligibility of locally time-reversed speech in four different languages: A fairly constant effect of segment duration, Lunch hour Colloquium, 2015.10.
74. Takuya KISHIDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard B. REMIJN, A critical number of power-fluctuation factors needed for Japanese noise-vocoded speech perception, The 31st Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, Fechner Day 2015, 2015.08.
75. Emi HASUO, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Takuya KISHIDA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Kazuo UEDA, Perceived durations of filled and empty intervals, The 31st Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, Fechner Day 2015, 2015.08.
76. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Shunsuke TAMURA, Wolfgang Ellermeier, Florian Kattner, Stephan Daebler, The effect of segment duration on the intelligibility of locally time-reversed speech: A multilingual comparison, The 31st Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, Fechner Day 2015, 2015.08.
77. On the intelligibility of Japanese speech reduced into and resynthesized from principal-component spaces.
78. Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Takayuki SASAKI, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Auditory Grammar in music: Demonstrations, The 48th Colloquium on Perception and International Five-Sense Symposium, 2015.03.
79. Takuya KISHIDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Perceptual roles of power-fluctuation factors in Japanese speech, The 48th Colloquium on Perception and International Five-Sense Symposium, 2015.03.
80. Takuya KISHIDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Perceptual roles of power-fluctuation factors in speech perception: A new method of factor analysis, The Auditory Research Meeting, 2014.12.
81. Shinya ISAJI, Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Speech intelligibility mapped onto a time-frequency resolution plane, The Auditory Research Meeting, 2014.12.
82. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Three factors or four? Factor analyses of spoken sentences revisited, The 19th Auditory Research Forum and the 1st Annual Meeting of the Society for Bioacoustics, 2014.12.
83. Shinya ISAJI, Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Tiled speech: Psychophysics of speech intelligibility, The 19th Auditory Research Forum and the 1st Annual Meeting of the Society for Bioacoustics, 2014.12.
84. Auditory Grammar: An intimate connection between perceptual organization and auditory communication.
85. Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Takayuki SASAKI, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Auditory Grammar in Music, ICMPC 13-APSCOM 5, 2014.08.
86. Emi HASUO, Kazuo UEDA, Takuya KISHIDA, Haruna FUJIHIRA, Satoshi MORIMOTO, Gerard B. REMIJN, Kimio Shiraishi, Shozo Tobimatsu, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Duration perception of filled and empty intervals: A study with magnitude estimation and electroencephalography, ICMPC 13-APSCOM 5, 2014.08.
87. Gerard B. REMIJN, Yushiro TSUBAKI, Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Auditory Reorganization of Gliding Tones in Different Frequency Ranges, ICMPC 13-APSCOM 5, 2014.08.
88. Takuya KISHIDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Perceptual Roles of Power Fluctuation Factors in Speech , ICMPC 13-APSCOM 5, 2014.08.
89. Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Mizuki MATSUDA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Kazuo UEDA, Temporal resolution needed to hear out Japanese morae in mosaic speech, The Auditory Research Meeting, 2014.05.
90. Auditory Grammar.
91. Auditory Grammar applied to speech perception.
92. Factor Analyses of Critical-Band Filtered Normal and Whispered Speech.
93. Effects of Frequency-Band Elimination on Identification of Noise-Vocoded Japanese Syllables.
94. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Takuya FUJIOKA, Factor analyses of power fluctuations in spoken sentences: applying cepstral analyses, The 18th Auditory Research Forum, 2013.12.
95. Shinya ISAJI, Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Effects of frequency-band elimination on identification of noise-vocoded Japanese syllables, The 18th Auditory Research Forum, 2013.12.
96. Emi HASUO, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Takuya KISHIDA, Erika Tomimatsu, Kazuo UEDA, Simon GRONDIN, The filled duration illusion with the method of adjustment when filled vs. empty comparison intervals are used, The 29th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2013.10.
97. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Takuya FUJIOKA, Factor analyses of power fluctuations in spoken sentences of eight languages: Analyses of individual data, The 29th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2013.10.
98. Takuya KISHIDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Effects of elimination of power-fluctuation factors from critical-band noise-vocoded speech, The 29th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2013.10.
99. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Takuya FUJIOKA, Finding acoustic commonality in different languages and speakers: A multivariate approach to spoken sentences, Seminar at INSERM, 2013.10.
100. Takuya KISHIDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Gerard B. REMIJN, Takuya FUJIOKA, Perceptual roles of power-fluctuation factors of speech sound revealed by cepstral liftering and zero-shifted factor analysis, The 22nd Virtual Reality Psychology International Conference, 2013.10.
101. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kana DOUMOTO, Wolfgang ELLERMEIER, Florian KATTNER, Disruptive effect of unattended noise-vocoded speech on recall of visually presented digits: Interaction between the number of frequency bands and languages, 21st International Congress on Acoustics, 165th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, 52nd Meeting of the Canadian Acoustical Association, 2013.06.
102. Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Shota FUJIMARU, Yuki OHSAKA, Sonority in British English, 21st International Congress on Acoustics, 165th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, 52nd Meeting of the Canadian Acoustical Association, 2013.06.
103. Feng LI, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Influence of duration on the perception of consonants /x/ and /j/ in Chinese, 21st International Congress on Acoustics, 165th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, 52nd Meeting of the Canadian Acoustical Association, 2013.06.
104. Comparison of Factors Extracted from Power Fluctuations in Critical-Band-Filtered Homophonic Choral Music.
105. Mosaic speech: Time and frequency resolution necessary for auditory communication.
106. Multivariate analyses and resyntheses of singing voices.
107. Emi HASUO, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Erika Tomimatsu, Simon GRONDIN, Kazuo UEDA, Perceiving filled vs. empty time intervals: A comparison of adjustment and magnitude estimation methods, Fechner Day 2012, the 28th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2012.10.
108. Tsuyoshi KURODA, Simon GRONDIN, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, French and English rhythms are perceptually discriminable with only intensity changes in low frequency regions of speech, Fechner Day 2012, the 28th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2012.10.
109. Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kazuo UEDA, Shota FUJIMARU, Hirotoshi MOTOMURA, Yuki OHSAKA, Acoustical correlate of phonological sonority in British English, Fechner Day 2012, the 28th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2012.10.
110. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Kiyoto NOGUCHI, Yuichi SATSUKAWA, Perceptual roles of different frequency bands in Japanese syllable identification, Fechner Day 2012, the 28th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics, 2012.10.
111. Kazuo UEDA, Yoshitaka NAKAJIMA, Comparison of factors extracted from power fluctuations in critical-band-filtered homophonic choral music, The 12th International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition and the 8th Triennial Conference of the European Society for the Cognitive Sciences of Music, 2012.07.
112. What are people listening to when they hear speech?.
113. A study for practical application of a quasi-real-time consonant-enhancement system.
114. Disruptive effect of unattended noise-vocoded speech.
115. Developmental process of speech production in infancy: Comparison of Japanese- and English-learning infants.
116. Effects of frequency-band elimination on syllable identification in Japanese noise-vocoded speech: Analyses with two speakers.
117. ERP measurements and rating scale judgments of normal and whispered speech.
118. Disruptive effect of unattended noise-vocoded speech on recall of visually presented digits: Interaction between the number of frequency bands and languages.
119. Application of a quasi-real-time consonant enhancement system to speech sentences.
120. Effects of frequency-band elimination on syllable identification of Japanese noise-vocoded speech: Analyses of confusion matirices using amount of information transmitted.
121. Perception of English plural endings in Japanese young adults.
122. The intelligibility of Japanese and German noise-vocoded speech.
123. Factor analyses of power fluctuations in critical-band-filtered chorus.
124. Effects of Frequency-Band Elimination on Syllable Identification of Japanese Noise-Vocoded Speech: Analyses of Confusion Matrices.
125. An acoustic language universal: A perceptual experiment employing noise-vocoded speech.
126. The effect of amplitude envelope coherence across frequency bands on the intelligibility of noise-vocoded speech.
127. A consistent clustering of power fluctuations in British English, French, German, and Japanese.
128. A computational approach to speech perception: A consistent clustering of power fluctuations in English, French, German, and Japanese.
129. Common factors observed in power fluctuations of British English, French, German and Japanese speech: A computational approach to speech perception.
130. A computational approach to speech perception: Common factors to Japanese and British English.
131. Relationship between factor scores and phonemes in a factor analysis of English speech..
132. Critical-band-filter analyses of speech sentences: Common factors across Japanese, British English, French, and German..
133. A critical-band-filtered analysis of Japanese speech sentences.
134. Factor analyses of critical-band-filtered speech of British English and Japanese.
135. Factor Analyses of critical-band-filtered speech of Japanese.
136. A critical-band-filter analysis of speech sentences in Japanese.
137. Principal component analyses on critical-band-filtered British English.
138. Principal component analyses of critical-band-filtered speech.
139. Critical-band filter analysis of speech sentences.
140. Critical-band-filter analysis of speech sentences: A case of British English.
141. A system to improve the compatibility between departure signals and speech announcements.
142. Is Speech Special?.
143. English /r/ and /l/ identification by native and non-native listeners in noise: applying screening text, signal-to-noise ratio variation, and training.
144. Auditory Organization and Auditory Scene Analysis.
145. An artificial environment is often a noisy environment: Auditory scene analysis and speech perception in noise.
146. Perceptual organization of onsets and offsets of sounds.
147. Speech perception in a noisy environment: The implication of auditory scene analysis.
148. Pitch difference limens: The effects of sound source frequency and vocal tract function.
149. Perception of American English phonemes under noise by native speakers of Japanese.
150. Pitch differential limens of synthesized speech: The effect of fundamental frequency change.
151. Pitch differential liments of synthesized speech: The effect of fundamental frequency change.
152. Identification of English /r/ and /l/ in white noise by Japanese-native speakers: The effects of training and signal-to-noise ratio.
153. Identification of English /r/ and /l/ in noise: The effects of training and signal-to-noise ratio.
154. Identification of English /r/ and /l/ in white noise by native and non-native listeners.
155. Technical listening training: Improvement of sound sensitivity for acoustic engineers and sound designers.
156. Technical listening training: Education program of sensitivity to sounds for acoustic designers.
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