The intensity of masking noise affects the mismatch negativity to speech sounds in human subjects

scientific article published in February 2001

The intensity of masking noise affects the mismatch negativity to speech sounds in human subjects is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1016/S0304-3940(01)01508-7
P698PubMed publication ID11165769

P2093author name stringLogan J
Campbell KB
Marcoux A
Muller-Gass A
P2860cites workERPs for infrequent omissions and inclusions of stimulus elementsQ38572097
Analysis of speech sounds is left-hemisphere predominant at 100-150ms after sound onsetQ48214464
The effects of decreased audibility produced by high-pass noise masking on N1 and the mismatch negativity to speech sounds /ba/and/daQ48220452
Background acoustic noise and the hemispheric lateralization of speech processing in the human brain: magnetic mismatch negativity studyQ48404680
The effects of decreased audibility produced by high-pass noise masking on cortical event-related potentials to speech sounds/ba/and/daQ48788592
Effect of contralateral white noise masking on the mismatch negativity.Q50521611
Standardization of a test of speech perception in noise.Q50588761
The removal of the eye-movement artifact from the EEG by regression analysis in the frequency domainQ71731833
Event-related potentials and the categorical perception of speech soundsQ72297217
Mismatch negativity to inclusions of noise within complex spectrotemporal sound patternsQ78054556
P433issue3
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjecthuman subject research projectQ1331083
P304page(s)197-200
P577publication date2001-02-01
P1433published inNeuroscience LettersQ7002625
P1476titleThe intensity of masking noise affects the mismatch negativity to speech sounds in human subjects
P478volume299