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Damir Kovačić

Researcher at University of Split

Publications -  22
Citations -  974

Damir Kovačić is an academic researcher from University of Split. The author has contributed to research in topics: Grammatical gender & Cochlear implant. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 20 publications receiving 893 citations. Previous affiliations of Damir Kovačić include Katholieke Universiteit Leuven & International School for Advanced Studies.

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Sounds and silence: An optical topography study of language recognition at birth

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a 24-channel optical topography device to assess changes in the concentration of total hemoglobin in response to auditory stimulation in 12 areas of the right hemisphere and 12 regions of the left hemisphere.
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On the autonomy of the grammatical gender systems of the two languages of a bilingual

TL;DR: In this article, highly-proficient bilinguals were asked to name two sets of pictures in their L2: a) pictures whose names in the L2 and their corresponding L1 translations have the same grammatical gender value, and b) pictures with different gender values.
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The gender congruency effect and the selection of freestanding and bound morphemes: evidence from croatian.

TL;DR: The authors report 3 picture-word interference experiments in which they explore some properties of the agreement process in speech production and show that the cause of the gender congruency effect is not at the level where lexical-grammatical information is selected but at thelevel of selection of freestanding morphemes.
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Voice gender perception by cochlear implantees.

TL;DR: Gender identification of human voices was studied in a juvenile population of cochlear implant (CI) users exposed to naturalistic speech stimuli using two different voice gender perception tasks to evaluate the relationship between implant output and behavioral performance.
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Instrumental recording of electrophonic sounds from Leonid fireballs

TL;DR: In this article, the first instrumental detection of electrophonic sounds obtained during the observation of 1998 Leonids from Mongolia Two Leonid fireballs of brightness −65m and −12m produced short, low-frequency sounds, which were simultaneously recorded by microphones in a special setup and heard by different observers.