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Michelle R. Molis

Researcher at Oregon Health & Science University

Publications -  47
Citations -  1313

Michelle R. Molis is an academic researcher from Oregon Health & Science University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Hearing loss. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 39 publications receiving 1195 citations. Previous affiliations of Michelle R. Molis include University of Texas at Austin & United States Department of Veterans Affairs.

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On the evidence for maturational constraints in second-language acquisition

TL;DR: This paper showed that L2 attainment negatively correlates with age of learning even if learning commences after the presumed end of the critical period, and that the outcome of L2 acquisition may depend on L1-L2 pairings and L2 use.
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Perception of voice and tone onset time continua in children with dyslexia with and without attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

TL;DR: Children with RD have difficulty in processing speech and nonspeech stimuli containing similar auditory temporal cues, and phoneme perception is related to phonemic awareness and decoding skills, and the potential presence of ADHD needs to be taken into account in studies of perception in children with RD.
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Cortical encoding of signals in noise: Effects of stimulus type and recording paradigm

TL;DR: To understand signal-in-noise neural encoding better, the effect of signal type, noise type, and evoking paradigm on the P1-N1-P2 complex is determined and the possible usefulness of CAEPs as an aid to understand perception-in -noise deficits is confirmed.
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Identifying dead regions in the cochlea: psychophysical tuning curves and tone detection in threshold-equalizing noise.

TL;DR: The current results do not provide support for the TEN task as a reliable diagnostic tool for identification of dead regions, and it may be appropriate to view tuning curve results as more reliable in cases where TEN and PTC results disagree.
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Enjoyment of music by elderly hearing-impaired listeners.

TL;DR: Although new hearing aid technologies have somewhat reduced problems of music enjoyment experienced by hearing-impaired people, audiologists should be aware that some 25-30% of patients may have difficulties with listening to music and may require extra attention to minimize those problems.