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Journal ArticleDOI

Stimulus Dominance in Dichotic Listening

TLDR
In this paper, listeners received 20 dichotic-listening runs of 30 stop-vowel syllables with 30 pairs of syllables per run, which yielded 480 pairs of responses for each of the 30 pairs.
Abstract
Twenty-four listeners received 20 dichotic-listening runs of natural stop-vowel syllables. Listeners marked two responses for each of 30 pairs of syllables per run, which yielded 480 pairs of responses for each of the 30 pairs of syllables. The principal analysis focused on "stimulus dominance" wherein a significantly higher score occurs for one of the competing syllables in a pair regardless of the ear to which that syllable is presented. With 30 pairs of syllables, there were 15 possible instances of stimulus dominance; 11 were observed. The voicing feature was contrasted for 9 of the 15 pairs. Seven of those pairs resulted in significantly higher scores (dominance) for the voiceless stop than for the voiced, one resulted in a higher score for the voiced member of the pair, and for one pair the scores for the two members were essentially the same. Stimulus dominance cannot, however, be characterized sufficiently as a dominance of voiceless over voiced stops; three of the six pairs in which voicing was s...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Perceptual asymmetry on the dichotic fused words test and cerebral speech lateralization determined by the carotid sodium amytal test.

TL;DR: The rhymed fused dichotic words test was administered to 61 epileptic patients whose lesions were atrophic and predominantly unilateral and found that stimulus dominance effects have an important influence on the results, and must be taken into account in the interpretation of dichotic listening asymmetries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dichotic listening: what does it measure?

TL;DR: It is concluded that individual predictions of language dominance are not justified using the dichotic tests evaluated in the present study, and the data suggest that different dichosis tests reveal different results.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of stimulus type and directed attention on dichotic listening with children

TL;DR: The findings lend support to the hypothesis that perceptual asymmetries can be strongly influenced by the type of stimulus material used and the effect of attentional strategy employed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A primer on dichotic listening as a paradigm for the assessment of hemispheric asymmetry.

TL;DR: A comprehensive overview of a series of experimental variables with systematic modulatory effects on task performance is provided and guidance for the evaluation of past studies and help for resolving inconsistencies in the available literature is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dichotic listening with consonant–vowel pairs: The role of place of articulation and stimulus dominance

TL;DR: The results are interpreted in terms of the role of sub-phonemic components of speech and stimulus dominance in the measurement of auditory asymmetries and their implications for models of dichotic listening.
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