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63 results on '"Munson, Benjamin"'

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1. Gender and age biases in the assessment of speech accuracy: A study of speech‐language clinicians' ratings of /s/ accuracy.

2. Clinical Focus: The Development and Description of a Palette of Transmasculine Voices.

3. Acknowledging language variation and its power: Keys to justice and equity in applied psycholinguistics.

4. Individual Differences in the Development of Gendered Speech in Preschool Children: Evidence From a Longitudinal Study.

5. Perceiving gender while perceiving language: Integrating psycholinguistics and gender theory.

6. Auditory feedback experience in the development of phonetic production: Evidence from preschoolers with cochlear implants and their normal-hearing peers.

7. Cross-Linguistic Perceptual Categorization of the Three Corner Vowels: Effects of Listener Language and Talker Age.

8. Does Early Phonetic Differentiation Predict Later Phonetic Development? Evidence From a Longitudinal Study of /.../ Development in Preschool Children.

9. Fundamental frequency range and other acoustic factors that might contribute to the clear-speech benefita).

10. Clinical experience and categorical perception of children's speech.

11. Relationship between early phonological processing and later phonological awareness: Evidence from nonword repetition.

12. Public perceptions of traumatic brain injury: predictors of knowledge and the effects of education.

13. Does Speaker Race Affect the Assessment of Children's Speech Accuracy? A Comparison of Speech-Language Pathologists and Clinically Untrained Listeners.

14. Implicit and explicit gender priming in English lingual sibilant fricative perception.

15. Phonological encoding in speech-sound disorder: evidence from a cross-modal priming experiment.

16. The influence of lexical characteristics and talker accent on the recognition of English words by speakers of Japanese.

17. Bias in the perception of phonetic detail in children’s speech: A comparison of categorical and continuous rating scales.

18. Gradient perception of children’s productions of /s/ and /θ/: A comparative study of rating methods.

19. The Development of Voiceless Sibilant Fricatives in Putonghua-Speaking Children.

20. Gender typicality in children's speech: A comparison of boys with and without gender identity disorder.

21. Preschoolers rely on rich speech representations to process variable speech.

22. Modifying Speech to Children Based on Their Perceived Phonetic Accuracy.

23. Modifying Speech to Children Based on Their Perceived Phonetic Accuracy.

24. The Role of Experience in the Perception of Phonetic Detail in Children's Speech: A Comparison Between Speech-Language Pathologists and Clinically Untrained Listeners.

25. Effects of repeated production on vowel distinctiveness within nonwords.

26. The influence of /s/ quality on ratings of men's sexual orientation: Explicit and implicit measures of the ‘gay lisp’ stereotype

27. The influence of actual and imputed talker gender on fricative perception, revisited (L).

28. LAVENDER LESSONS LEARNED; OR, WHAT SEXUALITY CAN TEACH US ABOUT PHONETIC VARIATION.

29. Language specificity in the perception of voiceless sibilant fricatives in Japanese and English: Implications for cross-language differences in speech-sound development.

30. Levels of Phonological Abstraction and Knowledge of Socially Motivated Speech-Sound Variation: A Review, a Proposal, and a Commentary on the Papers by Clopper, Pierrehumbert, and Tamati, Drager, Foulkes, Mack, and Smith, Hall, and Munson.

31. Deconstructing phonetic transcription: Covert contrast, perceptual bias, and an extraterrestrial view of Vox Humana.

32. Variation, implied pathology, social meaning, and the ‘gay lisp’: A response to Van Borsel et al. (2009)

33. Parkinson’s disease and the effect of lexical factors on vowel articulation.

34. The influence of perceived sexual orientation on fricative identification.

35. The acoustic and perceptual bases of judgments of women and men's sexual orientation from read speech

36. Phonetic identification in quiet and in noise by listeners with cochlear implants.

37. The Influence of Vocabulary Size, Phonotactic Probability, and Wordlikeness on Nonword Repetitions of Children With and Without Specific Language Impairment.

38. Phonological Knowledge in Typical and Atypical Speech-Sound Development.

39. Lexical and Phonological Organization in Children: Evidence From Repetition Tasks.

40. Relationships Between Nonword Repetition Accuracy and Other Measures of Linguistic Development in Children With Phonological Disorders.

41. The Influence of Multiple Presentations on Judgments of Children's Phonetic Accuracy.

42. The Effect of Phonological Neighborhood Density on Vowel Articulation.

43. The Effect of Jaw Position on Measures of Tongue Strength and Endurance.

44. Relations Among Linguistic and Cognitive Skills and Spoken Word Recognition in Adults With Cochlear Implants.

45. Variability in /s/ Production in Children and Adults: Evidence From Dynamic Measures of Spectral Mean.

46. Patterns of phoneme perception errors by listeners with cochlear implants as a function of overall speech perception ability.

47. Acoustic and Perceptual Correlates of Stress in Nonwords Produced by Children With Suspected Developmental Apraxia of Speech and Children With Phonological Disorder.

48. Phonological Pattern Frequency and Speech Production in Adults and Children.

49. Making Race Visible in the Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences: A Critical Discourse Analysis.

50. The influence of lexical characteristics and talker accent on the recognition of English words by native speakers of Korean.

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