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Speech Production and Perception
ISSN: 2191-8651
Speech production is a complex sensorimotor task that requires the coordination of numerous physically complex and very different biological systems. Furthermore, it is a sophisticated cognitive task that transmits information between speakers and listeners. Speech perception uses multi-modal information combining visible articulatory movements and audible acoustic properties in an adaptive way. Understanding the cognitive, motor and sensory mechanisms that underlie speech production and perception is a fascinating objective that requires interdisciplinary competences in various research areas such as linguistics, perception, psychology, cognition, neuroscience, motor control, biology, aerodynamics, acoustics, and biomechanics. The aim of this book series is to investigate the various mechanisms underlying speech production and perception. Each issue of this series will be devoted to a specific topic. This topic will be addressed from different, sometimes even controversial perspectives. Tutorials, up-to-date scientific papers, methodological reports and outstanding dissertations will be at the core of the series. The intended readers are graduate students and scientists from various research disciplines interested in speech production and perception. Scholars are welcome to submit suitable works to the editors. All articles in edited volumes undergo a double-blind peer review. All dissertations undergo a close reading by the series editors and authors will be invited to revise where required.
8 publications
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Die «andere» Familie
Repräsentationskritische Analysen von der Frühen Neuzeit bis zur Gegenwart©2013 Edited Collection -
Reading Monuments
A Comparative Study of Monuments in Poznań and Strasbourg from the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries©2020 Monographs -
Speech Planning and Dynamics
©2012 Edited Collection -
Individual Differences in Speech Production and Perception
©2015 Edited Collection -
Origins of Human Language: Continuities and Discontinuities with Nonhuman Primates
©2017 Edited Collection -
Some Aspects of Speech and the Brain
©2009 Edited Collection