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Congenitally Blind

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congenitally blind

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with congenitally blind across World Wide.
4 curated items2 Seminars2 ePosters
Updated almost 3 years ago
4 items · congenitally blind
4 results
SeminarPsychology

The speaker identification ability of blind and sighted listeners

Almut Braun
Bundeskriminalamt, Wiesbaden
Feb 21, 2023

Previous studies have shown that blind individuals outperform sighted controls in a variety of auditory tasks; however, only few studies have investigated blind listeners’ speaker identification abilities. In addition, existing studies in the area show conflicting results. The presented empirical investigation with 153 blind (74 of them congenitally blind) and 153 sighted listeners is the first of its kind and scale in which long-term memory effects of blind listeners’ speaker identification abilities are examined. For the empirical investigation, all listeners were evenly assigned to one of nine subgroups (3 x 3 design) in order to investigate the influence of two parameters with three levels, respectively, on blind and sighted listeners’ speaker identification performance. The parameters were a) time interval; i.e. a time interval of 1, 3 or 6 weeks between the first exposure to the voice to be recognised (familiarisation) and the speaker identification task (voice lineup); and b) signal quality; i.e. voice recordings were presented in either studio-quality, mobile phone-quality or as recordings of whispered speech. Half of the presented voice lineups were target-present lineups in which the previously heard target voice was included. The other half consisted of target-absent lineups which contained solely distractor voices. Blind individuals outperformed sighted listeners only under studio quality conditions. Furthermore, for blind and sighted listeners no significant performance differences were found with regard to the three investigated time intervals of 1, 3 and 6 weeks. Blind as well as sighted listeners were significantly better at picking the target voice from target-present lineups than at indicating that the target voice was absent in target-absent lineups. Within the blind group, no significant correlations were found between identification performance and onset or duration of blindness. Implications for the field of forensic phonetics are discussed.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Decoding sounds in early visual cortex of sighted and blind individuals

Petra Vetter
University of Fribourg, Switzerland
Dec 8, 2021
ePoster

Egocentric navigation network plasticity: Training extends functional connectivity of V6 to frontal areas of congenitally blind people

Elena Aggius-Vella, Daniel-Robert Chebat, Shachar Maidenbaum, Amir Amedi

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Neural correlates of autobiographical memory in congenitally blind people

Sven Lange, Katharina Wall, Bettina Wabbels, Cornelia McCormick

FENS Forum 2024