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Dana L. Strait

Researcher at Northwestern University

Publications -  30
Citations -  3407

Dana L. Strait is an academic researcher from Northwestern University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Perception & Speech perception. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 30 publications receiving 3020 citations. Previous affiliations of Dana L. Strait include G. D. Searle & Company.

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Musical experience shapes top-down auditory mechanisms: evidence from masking and auditory attention performance.

TL;DR: It is suggested that long-term musical practice strengthens cognitive functions and that these functions benefit auditory skills, and musical training may serve to lessen the impact of these deficits by strengthening the corticofugal system for hearing.
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Musical experience and the aging auditory system: implications for cognitive abilities and hearing speech in noise.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that speech-in-noise perception and related cognitive function are enhanced in older musicians, implying that musical training may reduce the impact of age-related auditory decline.
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Relationships between behavior, brainstem and cortical encoding of seen and heard speech in musicians and non-musicians

TL;DR: Recorded brainstem and cortical evoked responses imply that neural representations of pitch, timing and timbre cues and cortical response timing are shaped in a coordinated manner, and indicate corticofugal modulation of subcortical afferent circuitry.
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Musical training during early childhood enhances the neural encoding of speech in noise.

TL;DR: Assessment of perception and subcortical processing of speech in noise and related cognitive abilities in musician and nonmusician children that were matched for a variety of overarching factors reveals that musicians' advantages for processing speech innoise are present during pivotal developmental years.
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Can you hear me now? Musical training shapes functional brain networks for selective auditory attention and hearing speech in noise.

TL;DR: Given the importance of auditory attention for the development and maintenance of language-related skills, musical training may aid in the prevention, habilitation, and remediation of individuals with a wide range of attention-based language, listening and learning impairments.