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Measurement Schmeasurement: Questionable Measurement Practices and How to Avoid Them
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Error tight: Exercises for lab groups to prevent research mistakes.
Assessing the effects of “native speaker” status on classic findings in speech research.
Editorial note – introduction to the special issue, “Teaching Sensation and Perception”
The effects of temporal cues, point-light displays, and faces on speech identification and listening effort
Preregistration: Practical Considerations for Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
Spread the Word: Enhancing Replicability of Speech Research Through Stimulus Sharing
“Where are the . . . Fixations?”: Grammatical number cues guide anticipatory fixations to upcoming referents and reduce lexical competition.
Understanding Speech amid the Jingle and Jangle: Recommendations for Improving Measurement Practices in Listening Effort Research
Recall of Speech is Impaired by Subsequent Masking Noise: A Replication of Rabbitt (1968) Experiment 2
About Face: Seeing the Talker Improves Spoken Word Recognition but Increases Listening Effort
Noise increases listening effort in normal-hearing young adults, regardless of working memory capacity
What accounts for individual differences in susceptibility to the McGurk effect?
Keep listening: Grammatical context reduces but does not eliminate activation of unexpected words.
Measuring Listening Effort: Convergent Validity, Sensitivity, and Links With Cognitive and Personality Measures
Talking points: A modulating circle reduces listening effort without improving speech recognition
Making long-distance relationships work: Quantifying lexical competition with Hidden Markov Models
Many neighborhoods: Phonological and perceptual neighborhood density in lexical production and perception
Conducting spoken word recognition research online: Validation and a new timing method
Grammatical context constrains lexical competition in spoken word recognition
Phi-square Lexical Competition Database (Phi-Lex): An online tool for quantifying auditory and visual lexical competition
Individual Differences in Susceptibility to the McGurk Effect: Links With Lipreading and Detecting Audiovisual Incongruity
There goes the neighborhood: Lipreading and the structure of the mental lexicon
Sizing up the competition: Quantifying the influence of the mental lexicon on auditory and visual spoken word recognition
Lipreading, Processing Speed, and Working Memory in Younger and Older Adults