- What is auditory suppression?
- What is auditory feedback and give an example?
- What effect does delayed auditory feedback have on speaking rate?
- What is delayed auditory feedback device?
What is auditory suppression?
In human auditory cortex, this suppression is observed during speech (speaking-induced suppression, or SIS), where it manifests properties that elucidate how auditory feedback is processed: a speaker's auditory cortex responds to the sound of his own speech with an activation that is suppressed compared with a greater ...
What is auditory feedback and give an example?
What Is Auditory Feedback? Auditory feedback refers to the sound(s) you hear after you perform an action. For example, if you drop a pencil, the auditory feedback you receive is the clattering sound of the pencil hitting the floor.
What effect does delayed auditory feedback have on speaking rate?
Delayed auditory feedback can result in an increase in speech errors and breakdown in speech fluency (e.g., Jones & Striemer, 2007; Corey & Cuddapah, 2008). The findings from the present study support such earlier reports of increase in errors and disfluencies under delayed auditory feedback.
What is delayed auditory feedback device?
Delayed auditory feedback is also called delayed sidetone. It is a kind of altered auditory feedback that comprises spreading the time between auditory perception and speech. In a device, delayed auditory feedback enables you to speak normally, and hear yourself through the device a fraction of a second later.