26 results on '"Sagi E"'
Search Results
2. Dynamic properties of a diluted pyrochlore cooperative paramagnet (Tb_pY_{1-p})_2Ti_2O_7
- Author
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Keren, A., Gardner, J. S., Ehlers, G., Fukaya, A., Sagi, E., and Uemura, Y. J.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
Investigations of the spin dynamics of the geometrically frustrated pyrochlore (Tb_pY_{1-p})_2Ti_2O_7, using muon spin relaxation and neutron spin echo, as a function of magnetic coverage p, have been carried out. Our major finding is that paramagnetic fluctuations prevail as T->0 for all values of p, and that they are sensitive to dilution, indicating a cooperative spin motion. However, the percolation threshold p_c is not a critical point for the fluctuations. We also find that the low temperatures spectral density has a 1/f behavior, and that dilution slows down the spin fluctuations., Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
- Published
- 2004
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3. Computer Vision for Recognition of Materials and Vessels in Chemistry Lab Settings and the Vector-LabPics Data Set
- Author
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Sagi Eppel, Haoping Xu, Mor Bismuth, and Alan Aspuru-Guzik
- Subjects
Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Published
- 2020
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4. Current and planned cochlear implant research at New York University Laboratory for Translational Auditory Research
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Svirsky, M., Fitzgerald, M., Neuman, A., Sagi, E., Tan, C., Ketten, Darlene, Martin, B., Svirsky, M., Fitzgerald, M., Neuman, A., Sagi, E., Tan, C., Ketten, Darlene, and Martin, B.
- Abstract
The Laboratory of Translational Auditory Research (LTAR/NYUSM) is part of the Department of Otolaryngology at the New York University School of Medicine and has close ties to the New York University Cochlear Implant Center. LTAR investigators have expertise in multiple related disciplines including speech and hearing science, audiology, engineering, and physiology. The lines of research in the laboratory deal mostly with speech perception by hearing impaired listeners, and particularly those who use cochlear implants (CIs) or hearing aids (HAs). Although the laboratory's research interests are diverse, there are common threads that permeate and tie all of its work. In particular, a strong interest in translational research underlies even the most basic studies carried out in the laboratory. Another important element is the development of engineering and computational tools, which range from mathematical models of speech perception to software and hardware that bypass clinical speech processors and stimulate cochlear implants directly, to novel ways of analyzing clinical outcomes data. If the appropriate tool to conduct an important experiment does not exist, we may work to develop it, either in house or in collaboration with academic or industrial partners. Another notable characteristic of the laboratory is its interdisciplinary nature where, for example, an audiologist and an engineer might work closely to develop an approach that would not have been feasible if each had worked singly on the project. Similarly, investigators with expertise in hearing aids and cochlear implants might join forces to study how human listeners integrate information provided by a CI and a HA. The following pages provide a flavor of the diversity and the commonalities of our research interests.
- Published
- 2012
5. Voluntary silence: Israeli media self-censorship during the Second Lebanon War
- Author
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Sagi Elbaz and Daniel Bar-Tal
- Subjects
Self-Censorship ,Conflict ,Elites ,Narratives ,Second Lebanon War ,Psychology ,BF1-990 ,Sociology (General) ,HM401-1281 - Abstract
This article describes the characteristics of self-censorship in general, specifically in mass media, with regard to narratives of political violence, including motivations for and effects of practicing self-censorship. It first presents a broad theoretical conceptualization of self-censorship, and then focuses on its practice in media. The case study examined the representation of The Second Lebanon War in the Israeli national media. The authors carried out content analysis and in-depth interviews with former and current journalists in order to investigate one of the reasons for the dominance of the hegemonic narrative in the media – namely, self-censorship. Indeed, the analysis revealed widespread use of self-censorship by Israeli journalists, their motivations for practicing it, and the effects of its use on the society.
- Published
- 2019
6. Individual and Combined Effects of Paternal Deprivation and Developmental Exposure to Firemaster 550 on Socio-Emotional Behavior in Prairie Voles
- Author
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Sagi Enicole A. Gillera, William P. Marinello, Mason A. Nelson, Brian M. Horman, and Heather B. Patisaul
- Subjects
endocrine disruptors ,flame retardants ,sexual differentiation ,pair bond ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
The prevalence of neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) is rapidly rising, suggesting a confluence of environmental factors that are likely contributing, including developmental exposure to environmental contaminants. Unfortunately, chemical exposures and social stressors frequently occur simultaneously in many communities, yet very few studies have sought to establish the combined effects on neurodevelopment or behavior. Social deficits are common to many NDDs, and we and others have shown that exposure to the chemical flame retardant mixture, Firemaster 550 (FM 550), or paternal deprivation impairs social behavior and neural function. Here, we used a spontaneously prosocial animal model, the prairie vole (Microtus ochrogaster), to explore the effects of perinatal chemical (FM 550) exposure alone or in combination with an early life stressor (paternal absence) on prosocial behavior. Dams were exposed to vehicle (sesame oil) or 1000 µg FM 550 orally via food treats from conception through weaning and the paternal absence groups were generated by removing the sires the day after birth. Adult offspring of both sexes were then subjected to open-field, sociability, and a partner preference test. Paternal deprivation (PD)-related effects included increased anxiety, decreased sociability, and impaired pair-bonding in both sexes. FM 550 effects include heightened anxiety and partner preference in females but reduced partner preference in males. The combination of FM 550 exposure and PD did not exacerbate any behaviors in either sex except for distance traveled by females in the partner preference test and, to a lesser extent, time spent with, and the number of visits to the non-social stimulus by males in the sociability test. FM 550 ameliorated the impacts of parental deprivation on partner preference behaviors in both sexes. This study is significant because it provides evidence that chemical and social stressors can have unique behavioral effects that differ by sex but may not produce worse outcomes in combination.
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- 2022
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7. Idiopathic apnoea of prematurity treated with doxapram and aminophylline.
- Author
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SAGI, E., EYAL, F., ALPAN, G., PATZ, D., and ARAD, I.
- Abstract
Doxapram infusion was given to five preterm infants in whom therapeutic concentrations of theophylline had failed to control episodes of apnoea. Doxapram successfully controlled the apnoea, the arterial blood PCO2 value decreased significantly, and no side effects were reported. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1984
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8. Necrotising enterocolitis in the very low birthweight infant: expressed breast milk feeding compared with parenteral feeding.
- Author
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EYAL, F., SAGI, E., ARAD, I., and AVITAL, A.
- Abstract
The incidence of necrotising enterocolitis (NEC) in very low birthweight infants (VLBW less than or equal to 1500 g) was reduced by the delayed onset of enteral feeding. Eight (18%) out of 44 VLBW infants who were in hospital during the first year of the study developed NEC. During the next 12 months 85 similar infants were initially fed by parenteral nutrition only, and then from age 14-21 days with infant formula. During the second year only 3 (3%) patients developed NEC. There were no other relevant changes in management. Throughout the entire study, the onset of NEC in each infant in whom it occurred was after the start of enteral feeding. We recommend avoiding enteral feeding in VLBW infants during the period that they are particularly vulnerable--namely the first 2 or 3 weeks of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1982
9. A level adjusted cochlear frequency-to-place map for estimating tonotopic frequency mismatch with a cochlear implant.
- Author
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Sagi E and Svirsky MA
- Abstract
Objectives: To provide a level-adjusted correction to the current standard relating anatomical cochlear place to characteristic frequency in humans, and to re-evaluate anatomical frequency mismatch in cochlear implant (CI) recipients considering this correction. It is hypothesized that a level-adjusted place-frequency function may represent a more accurate tonotopic benchmark for CIs in comparison to the current standard., Design: The present analytical study compiled data from fifteen previous animal studies that reported iso-intensity responses from cochlear structures at different stimulation levels. Extracted outcome measures were characteristic frequencies and centroid-based best frequencies at 70 dB SPL input from 47 specimens spanning a broad range of cochlear locations. A simple relationship was used to transform these measures to human estimates of characteristic and best frequencies, and non-linear regression was applied to these estimates to determine how the standard human place-frequency function should be adjusted to reflect best frequency rather than characteristic frequency. The proposed level-adjusted correction was then compared to average place-frequency positions of commonly used CI devices when programmed with clinical settings., Results: The present study showed that the best frequency at 70 dB SPL (BF70) tends to shift away from characteristic frequency (CF). The amount of shift was statistically significant (signed-rank test z = 5.143, p < 0.001), but the amount and direction of shift depended on cochlear location. At cochlear locations up to 600° from the base, BF70 shifted downwards in frequency relative to CF by about 4 semitones on average. Beyond 600° from the base, BF70 shifted upwards in frequency relative to CF by about 6 semitones on average. In terms of spread (90% prediction interval), the amount of shift between CF and BF70 varied from relatively no shift to nearly an octave of shift. With the new level-adjusted frequency-place function, the amount of anatomical frequency mismatch for devices programmed with standard of care settings is less extreme than originally thought, and may be nonexistent for all but the most apical electrodes., Conclusions: The present study validates the current standard for relating cochlear place to characteristic frequency, and introduces a level-adjusted correction for how best frequency shifts away from characteristic frequency at moderately loud stimulation levels. This correction may represent a more accurate tonotopic reference for CIs. To the extent that it does, its implementation may potentially enhance perceptual accommodation and speech understanding in CI users, thereby improving CI outcomes and contributing to advancements in the programming and clinical management of CIs.
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- 2024
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10. Caught Red-Handed.
- Author
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Wiener-Well Y, Levin PD, Sagi E, Ben-Chetrit E, and Ben-Chetrit E
- Subjects
- Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, COVID-19 diagnosis, Hand Dermatoses virology, Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome diagnosis
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- 2022
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11. Visualization of Speech Perception Analysis via Phoneme Alignment: A Pilot Study.
- Author
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Ratnanather JT, Wang LC, Bae SH, O'Neill ER, Sagi E, and Tward DJ
- Abstract
Objective: Speech tests assess the ability of people with hearing loss to comprehend speech with a hearing aid or cochlear implant. The tests are usually at the word or sentence level. However, few tests analyze errors at the phoneme level. So, there is a need for an automated program to visualize in real time the accuracy of phonemes in these tests. Method: The program reads in stimulus-response pairs and obtains their phonemic representations from an open-source digital pronouncing dictionary. The stimulus phonemes are aligned with the response phonemes via a modification of the Levenshtein Minimum Edit Distance algorithm. Alignment is achieved via dynamic programming with modified costs based on phonological features for insertion, deletions and substitutions. The accuracy for each phoneme is based on the F1-score. Accuracy is visualized with respect to place and manner (consonants) or height (vowels). Confusion matrices for the phonemes are used in an information transfer analysis of ten phonological features. A histogram of the information transfer for the features over a frequency-like range is presented as a phonemegram. Results: The program was applied to two datasets. One consisted of test data at the sentence and word levels. Stimulus-response sentence pairs from six volunteers with different degrees of hearing loss and modes of amplification were analyzed. Four volunteers listened to sentences from a mobile auditory training app while two listened to sentences from a clinical speech test. Stimulus-response word pairs from three lists were also analyzed. The other dataset consisted of published stimulus-response pairs from experiments of 31 participants with cochlear implants listening to 400 Basic English Lexicon sentences via different talkers at four different SNR levels. In all cases, visualization was obtained in real time. Analysis of 12,400 actual and random pairs showed that the program was robust to the nature of the pairs. Conclusion: It is possible to automate the alignment of phonemes extracted from stimulus-response pairs from speech tests in real time. The alignment then makes it possible to visualize the accuracy of responses via phonological features in two ways. Such visualization of phoneme alignment and accuracy could aid clinicians and scientists., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Ratnanather, Wang, Bae, O'Neill, Sagi and Tward.)
- Published
- 2022
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12. Reducing interaural tonotopic mismatch preserves binaural unmasking in cochlear implant simulations of single-sided deafness.
- Author
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Sagi E, Azadpour M, Neukam J, Capach NH, and Svirsky MA
- Subjects
- Hearing, Humans, Cochlear Implantation, Cochlear Implants, Deafness diagnosis, Speech Perception
- Abstract
Binaural unmasking, a key feature of normal binaural hearing, can refer to the improved intelligibility of masked speech by adding masking that facilitates perceived separation of target and masker. A question relevant for cochlear implant users with single-sided deafness (SSD-CI) is whether binaural unmasking can still be achieved if the additional masking is spectrally degraded and shifted. CIs restore some aspects of binaural hearing to these listeners, although binaural unmasking remains limited. Notably, these listeners may experience a mismatch between the frequency information perceived through the CI and that perceived by their normal hearing ear. Employing acoustic simulations of SSD-CI with normal hearing listeners, the present study confirms a previous simulation study that binaural unmasking is severely limited when interaural frequency mismatch between the input frequency range and simulated place of stimulation exceeds 1-2 mm. The present study also shows that binaural unmasking is largely retained when the input frequency range is adjusted to match simulated place of stimulation, even at the expense of removing low-frequency information. This result bears implications for the mechanisms driving the type of binaural unmasking of the present study and for mapping the frequency range of the CI speech processor in SSD-CI users.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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13. Contribution of formant frequency information to vowel perception in steady-state noise by cochlear implant users.
- Author
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Sagi E and Svirsky MA
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Adult, Aged, Algorithms, Cues, Electric Stimulation, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Persons With Hearing Impairments psychology, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Cochlear Implantation instrumentation, Cochlear Implants, Noise adverse effects, Perceptual Masking, Persons With Hearing Impairments rehabilitation, Speech Acoustics, Speech Intelligibility, Speech Perception
- Abstract
Cochlear implant (CI) recipients have difficulty understanding speech in noise even at moderate signal-to-noise ratios. Knowing the mechanisms they use to understand speech in noise may facilitate the search for better speech processing algorithms. In the present study, a computational model is used to assess whether CI users' vowel identification in noise can be explained by formant frequency cues (F1 and F2). Vowel identification was tested with 12 unilateral CI users in quiet and in noise. Formant cues were measured from vowels in each condition, specific to each subject's speech processor. Noise distorted the location of vowels in the F2 vs F1 plane in comparison to quiet. The best fit model to subjects' data in quiet produced model predictions in noise that were within 8% of actual scores on average. Predictions in noise were much better when assuming that subjects used a priori knowledge regarding how formant information is degraded in noise (experiment 1). However, the model's best fit to subjects' confusion matrices in noise was worse than in quiet, suggesting that CI users utilize formant cues to identify vowels in noise, but to a different extent than how they identify vowels in quiet (experiment 2).
- Published
- 2017
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14. Language Use and Coalition Formation in Multiparty Negotiations.
- Author
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Sagi E and Diermeier D
- Subjects
- Humans, Psycholinguistics, Cooperative Behavior, Language, Negotiating
- Abstract
The alignment of bargaining positions is crucial to a successful negotiation. Prior research has shown that similarity in language use is indicative of the conceptual alignment of interlocutors. We use latent semantic analysis to explore how the similarity of language use between negotiating parties develops over the course of a three-party negotiation. Results show that parties that reach an agreement show a gradual increase in language similarity over the course of the negotiation. Furthermore, reaching the most financially efficient outcome is dependent on similarity in language use between the parties that have the most to gain from such an outcome., (Copyright © 2015 Cognitive Science Society, Inc.)
- Published
- 2017
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15. The neural encoding of formant frequencies contributing to vowel identification in normal-hearing listeners.
- Author
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Won JH, Tremblay K, Clinard CG, Wright RA, Sagi E, and Svirsky M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cochlea physiology, Cues, Evoked Potentials, Auditory physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Neurological, Monte Carlo Method, Perceptual Masking physiology, Phonetics, Speech Acoustics, Young Adult, Recognition, Psychology physiology, Speech Perception physiology
- Abstract
Even though speech signals trigger coding in the cochlea to convey speech information to the central auditory structures, little is known about the neural mechanisms involved in such processes. The purpose of this study was to understand the encoding of formant cues and how it relates to vowel recognition in listeners. Neural representations of formants may differ across listeners; however, it was hypothesized that neural patterns could still predict vowel recognition. To test the hypothesis, the frequency-following response (FFR) and vowel recognition were obtained from 38 normal-hearing listeners using four different vowels, allowing direct comparisons between behavioral and neural data in the same individuals. FFR was employed because it provides an objective and physiological measure of neural activity that can reflect formant encoding. A mathematical model was used to describe vowel confusion patterns based on the neural responses to vowel formant cues. The major findings were (1) there were large variations in the accuracy of vowel formant encoding across listeners as indexed by the FFR, (2) these variations were systematically related to vowel recognition performance, and (3) the mathematical model of vowel identification was successful in predicting good vs poor vowel identification performers based exclusively on physiological data.
- Published
- 2016
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16. Identifying issue frames in text.
- Author
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Sagi E, Diermeier D, and Kaufmann S
- Subjects
- Abortion, Induced, Algorithms, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Research Design, Public Opinion
- Abstract
Framing, the effect of context on cognitive processes, is a prominent topic of research in psychology and public opinion research. Research on framing has traditionally relied on controlled experiments and manually annotated document collections. In this paper we present a method that allows for quantifying the relative strengths of competing linguistic frames based on corpus analysis. This method requires little human intervention and can therefore be efficiently applied to large bodies of text. We demonstrate its effectiveness by tracking changes in the framing of terror over time and comparing the framing of abortion by Democrats and Republicans in the U.S.
- Published
- 2013
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17. What difference reveals about similarity.
- Author
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Sagi E, Gentner D, and Lovett A
- Subjects
- Humans, Models, Psychological, Psychomotor Performance, Reaction Time, Cognition, Discrimination, Psychological, Pattern Recognition, Visual
- Abstract
Detecting that two images are different is faster for highly dissimilar images than for highly similar images. Paradoxically, we showed that the reverse occurs when people are asked to describe how two images differ--that is, to state a difference between two images. Following structure-mapping theory, we propose that this disassociation arises from the multistage nature of the comparison process. Detecting that two images are different can be done in the initial (local-matching) stage, but only for pairs with low overlap; thus, "different" responses are faster for low-similarity than for high-similarity pairs. In contrast, identifying a specific difference generally requires a full structural alignment of the two images, and this alignment process is faster for high-similarity pairs. We described four experiments that demonstrate this dissociation and show that the results can be simulated using the Structure-Mapping Engine. These results pose a significant challenge for nonstructural accounts of similarity comparison and suggest that structural alignment processes play a significant role in visual comparison., (Copyright © 2012 Cognitive Science Society, Inc.)
- Published
- 2012
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18. A mathematical model of medial consonant identification by cochlear implant users.
- Author
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Svirsky MA, Sagi E, Meyer TA, Kaiser AR, and Teoh SW
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cues, Deafness therapy, Humans, Middle Aged, Psychoacoustics, Young Adult, Cochlear Implants, Deafness physiopathology, Models, Neurological, Phonetics, Speech Perception physiology
- Abstract
The multidimensional phoneme identification model is applied to consonant confusion matrices obtained from 28 postlingually deafened cochlear implant users. This model predicts consonant matrices based on these subjects' ability to discriminate a set of postulated spectral, temporal, and amplitude speech cues as presented to them by their device. The model produced confusion matrices that matched many aspects of individual subjects' consonant matrices, including information transfer for the voicing, manner, and place features, despite individual differences in age at implantation, implant experience, device and stimulation strategy used, as well as overall consonant identification level. The model was able to match the general pattern of errors between consonants, but not the full complexity of all consonant errors made by each individual. The present study represents an important first step in developing a model that can be used to test specific hypotheses about the mechanisms cochlear implant users employ to understand speech.
- Published
- 2011
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19. A model of incomplete adaptation to a severely shifted frequency-to-electrode mapping by cochlear implant users.
- Author
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Sagi E, Fu QJ, Galvin JJ 3rd, and Svirsky MA
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Adult, Audiometry, Speech, Humans, Middle Aged, Noise, Predictive Value of Tests, Adaptation, Physiological physiology, Cochlear Implants, Models, Neurological, Phonetics, Speech Perception physiology
- Abstract
In the present study, a computational model of phoneme identification was applied to data from a previous study, wherein cochlear implant (CI) users' adaption to a severely shifted frequency allocation map was assessed regularly over 3 months of continual use. This map provided more input filters below 1 kHz, but at the expense of introducing a downwards frequency shift of up to one octave in relation to the CI subjects' clinical maps. At the end of the 3-month study period, it was unclear whether subjects' asymptotic speech recognition performance represented a complete or partial adaptation. To clarify the matter, the computational model was applied to the CI subjects' vowel identification data in order to estimate the degree of adaptation, and to predict performance levels with complete adaptation to the frequency shift. Two model parameters were used to quantify this adaptation; one representing the listener's ability to shift their internal representation of how vowels should sound, and the other representing the listener's uncertainty in consistently recalling these representations. Two of the three CI users could shift their internal representations towards the new stimulation pattern within 1 week, whereas one could not do so completely even after 3 months. Subjects' uncertainty for recalling these representations increased substantially with the frequency-shifted map. Although this uncertainty decreased after 3 months, it remained much larger than subjects' uncertainty with their clinically assigned maps. This result suggests that subjects could not completely remap their phoneme labels, stored in long-term memory, towards the frequency-shifted vowels. The model also predicted that even with complete adaptation, the frequency-shifted map would not have resulted in improved speech understanding. Hence, the model presented here can be used to assess adaptation, and the anticipated gains in speech perception expected from changing a given CI device parameter.
- Published
- 2010
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20. A mathematical model of vowel identification by users of cochlear implants.
- Author
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Sagi E, Meyer TA, Kaiser AR, Teoh SW, and Svirsky MA
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Adult, Aged, Algorithms, Computer Simulation, Humans, Information Theory, Mathematical Concepts, Middle Aged, Psychoacoustics, Psycholinguistics, Speech, Young Adult, Cochlear Implants, Models, Neurological, Phonetics, Speech Perception
- Abstract
A simple mathematical model is presented that predicts vowel identification by cochlear implant users based on these listeners' resolving power for the mean locations of first, second, and/or third formant energies along the implanted electrode array. This psychophysically based model provides hypotheses about the mechanism cochlear implant users employ to encode and process the input auditory signal to extract information relevant for identifying steady-state vowels. Using one free parameter, the model predicts most of the patterns of vowel confusions made by users of different cochlear implant devices and stimulation strategies, and who show widely different levels of speech perception (from near chance to near perfect). Furthermore, the model can predict results from the literature, such as Skinner, et al. [(1995). Ann. Otol. Rhinol. Laryngol. 104, 307-311] frequency mapping study, and the general trend in the vowel results of Zeng and Galvin's [(1999). Ear Hear. 20, 60-74] studies of output electrical dynamic range reduction. The implementation of the model presented here is specific to vowel identification by cochlear implant users, but the framework of the model is more general. Computational models such as the one presented here can be useful for advancing knowledge about speech perception in hearing impaired populations, and for providing a guide for clinical research and clinical practice.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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21. Information transfer analysis: a first look at estimation bias.
- Author
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Sagi E and Svirsky MA
- Subjects
- Bias, Humans, Information Dissemination methods, Mathematics, Models, Biological, Probability, Speech Intelligibility, Communication, Hearing physiology, Phonation, Speech physiology
- Abstract
Information transfer analysis [G. A. Miller and P. E. Nicely, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 27, 338-352 (1955)] is a tool used to measure the extent to which speech features are transmitted to a listener, e.g., duration or formant frequencies for vowels; voicing, place and manner of articulation for consonants. An information transfer of 100% occurs when no confusions arise between phonemes belonging to different feature categories, e.g., between voiced and voiceless consonants. Conversely, an information transfer of 0% occurs when performance is purely random. As asserted by Miller and Nicely, the maximum-likelihood estimate for information transfer is biased to overestimate its true value when the number of stimulus presentations is small. This small-sample bias is examined here for three cases: a model of random performance with pseudorandom data, a data set drawn from Miller and Nicely, and reported data from three studies of speech perception by hearing impaired listeners. The amount of overestimation can be substantial, depending on the number of samples, the size of the confusion matrix analyzed, as well as the manner in which data are partitioned therein.
- Published
- 2008
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22. Homozygous splice site mutations in PKP1 result in loss of epidermal plakophilin 1 expression and underlie ectodermal dysplasia/skin fragility syndrome in two consanguineous families.
- Author
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Sprecher E, Molho-Pessach V, Ingber A, Sagi E, Indelman M, and Bergman R
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Plakophilins, RNA Splicing, Syndrome, Consanguinity, Ectodermal Dysplasia genetics, Mutation, Proteins genetics
- Abstract
During the last years, a growing number of inherited skin disorders have been recognized to be caused by abnormal function of desmosomal proteins. In the present study, we describe the first female individuals affected with the ectodermal dysplasia/skin fragility syndrome (MIM604536), a rare autosomal recessive disease due to mutations in the PKP1 gene encoding plakophilin 1, a critical component of desmosomal plaque. One patient was shown to carry a homozygous splice site mutation in intron 4. The second patient displayed a homozygous recurrent mutation affecting the acceptor splice site of intron 1. Both mutations were associated with intraepidermal separation, widening of intercellular spaces, and abnormal desmosome ultrastructure, and were found to result in the absence of immunoreactive plakophilin 1 in the epidermis of the affected individuals. These two cases emphasize the role of molecular genetics in the assessment of congenital blistering in newborns and illustrate the importance of proper desmosomal activity for normal epidermis development and function.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Self-healing juvenile cutaneous mucinosis in an infant.
- Author
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Hershko K, Sagi E, and Ingber A
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Infant, Mucinoses pathology, Remission, Spontaneous, Skin pathology, Skin Diseases pathology, Mucinoses diagnosis, Skin Diseases diagnosis
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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24. Invasive cryptococcosis in a family with epidermodysplasia verruciformis and idiopathic CD4 cell depletion.
- Author
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Yinnon AM, Rudensky B, Sagi E, Breuer G, Brautbar C, Polacheck I, and Halevy J
- Subjects
- Adult, Antigens, Fungal cerebrospinal fluid, Cryptococcosis drug therapy, Cryptococcosis microbiology, Epidermodysplasia Verruciformis microbiology, Family Health, Female, Humans, Male, Opportunistic Infections complications, Opportunistic Infections drug therapy, Pedigree, T-Lymphocytopenia, Idiopathic CD4-Positive microbiology, Cryptococcosis complications, Epidermodysplasia Verruciformis complications, Opportunistic Infections microbiology, T-Lymphocytopenia, Idiopathic CD4-Positive complications
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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25. Adherence of Candida albicans to epithelial cells: studies using fluorescently labelled yeasts and flow cytometry.
- Author
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Polacheck I, Antman A, Barth I, Sagi E, and Giloh H
- Subjects
- Adult, Aging, Candida genetics, Candida metabolism, Cell Adhesion, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 microbiology, Epithelium embryology, Epithelium microbiology, Female, Fluoresceins metabolism, Fluorescent Dyes metabolism, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Pregnancy, Candida albicans physiology, Flow Cytometry methods, Mouth Mucosa microbiology
- Abstract
Candida albicans adherence to epithelial cells is the first step in the infectious process, but in spite of its importance, current methods for the quantitative measurement of adherence of C. albicans to epithelial cells in vitro have some serious limitations. They are based on filtration assays and either microscopic or radiometric analysis. The adherence reaction is usually carried out with a large excess of yeasts (100-fold) over epithelial cells in order to perform the microscopic analysis, which is slow, subjective and limited to 100-200 cells and thus lacks statistical power. The radiometric analysis fails to measure individual cells. A method for measuring yeast adherence that overcomes these problems has been developed. It is based on labelling the yeasts with the fluorogenic marker 2',7'-bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein acetoxymethyl ester (BCECF) prior to the adherence reaction, and analysing 10(4) epithelial cells by flow cytometry, while nonbound yeasts are excluded by gating. Two subpopulations of buccal epithelial cells (BECs) which differ in their mean fluorescence intensities per cell (MFIs) were observed: one with MFI which did not exceed nonspecific fluorescence, and the other with MFI as high or higher than the MFI of labelled yeasts. The two subpopulations represent yeast-free and yeast-binding epithelial cells, respectively, and the MFI increment of the BECs is a quantitative measure of the extent of yeast adherence. Control experiments confirming previously described basic features of adherence, such as enhanced adherence at increasing yeast excess, diminished adherence of trypsin-treated or heat-inactivated yeasts, and the differential adherence of various Candida species, supported the validity of the assay. The possibility of studying adherence reliably at low yeast:epithelial cell ratios, which better mimic adhesion as it occurs in vivo, is an important advantage of the assay. New findings, using this method, included the observation that exfoliated BECs from diabetic patients exhibited the same capacity for C. albicans adherence as cells from healthy controls, and that epithelial cells from early human ontogenic stages had a significantly lower adherence level than those from later stages.
- Published
- 1995
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26. Differentiation of sera on phenol; a preliminary report.
- Author
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SAGI E and PLESS J
- Subjects
- Humans, Blood Proteins analysis, Cell Differentiation, Neoplasms diagnosis, Oxidation-Reduction, Phenol, Phenols
- Published
- 1954
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