Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 23
pro vyhledávání: '"Kate McClannahan"'
Publikováno v:
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 153:A168-A168
During the COVID-19 pandemic, facemask use made people suddenly aware of the importance of both visual information and acoustic clarity in speech perception. Masks with transparent panels can provide listeners with visual speech information, but such
Autor:
Amelia Mainardi, Mitchell S. Sommers, Kate McClannahan, Austin Luor, Yi-Fang Chiu, Jonathan E. Peelle
Publikováno v:
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 150:A182-A182
Autor:
Kate McClannahan
Publikováno v:
The Hearing Journal. 73:38
Publikováno v:
Clinical EEG and Neuroscience. 43:145-153
Cognitive operations engage neural generators oscillating at different frequencies distributed in time and space. Accordingly, oscillatory activity detected by magnetoencephalography (MEG)/electroencephalography (EEG) should be analyzed along frequen
Publikováno v:
Schizophrenia Research. 88:73-81
Background: Evidence indicates that the neuropathology of auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) varies according to their phenomenological characteristics. Therefore, AVH should be subgrouped accordingly in hallucinations research. As evaluation of th
Publikováno v:
Cognitive neuropsychiatry. 15(5)
Verbal hallucinations could result from attributing one's own inner speech to another. Inner speech is usually experienced in inner space, whereas hallucinations are often experienced in outer space. To clarify this paradox, we investigated schizophr
Publikováno v:
Psychological medicine. 40(5)
BackgroundThe attribution of self-generated speech to others could explain the experience of verbal hallucinations. To test this hypothesis, we developed a task to simultaneously evaluate (A) operations of self-other distinction and (B) operations th
Autor:
Vijay Aditya Tadipatri, Ahmed H. Tewfik, Arthur C. Leuthold, Massoud Stephane, Nuri F. Ince, Kate McClannahan, Michael A. Kuskowski, Charles R. Fletcher, Katie Nelson
Publikováno v:
Neuroscience letters. 473(3)
For sequential information, the first (primacy) and last (recency) items are better remembered than items in the middle of the sequence. The cognitive operations and neural correlates for the primacy and recency effects are unclear. In this paper, we
Autor:
Michael A. Kuskowski, Ahmed H. Tewfik, Arthur C. Leuthold, Christa Surerus, Kate McClannahan, Nuri F. Ince, Giuseppe Pellizzer, Massoud Stephane
Publikováno v:
Clinical EEG and neuroscience. 39(4)
The studies of the neural correlates of verbal working memory in schizophrenia are somewhat inconsistent. This could be related to experimental paradigms that engage differentially working memory components or methodological limitations in terms of c
Publikováno v:
2007 3rd International IEEE/EMBS Conference on Neural Engineering.
In this paper we investigate the use of event related desynchronization (ERD) and synchronization (ERS) patterns extracted from magnetoencephalogram (MEG) in a working memory task to discriminate between controls and patients with schizophrenia. In t