Program
You can download the program and abstract booklet in PDF.
Thursday, January 5 | ||
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08:30 | 09:00 | Registration and coffee |
09:00 | 09:15 | Welcome(TBA) |
09:15 | 09:45 | Marc René Schädler — University of Oldenburg, DE Towards Individual Aided Performance Predictions for the Matrix Sentence Test Abstract |
09:45 | 10:15 | Fanny Meunier — CNRS, Nice, FR Semantic Processing during Speech-in-Speech Perception and Links with Executive Functions Abstract |
10:15 | 10:45 | Coffee break (Foyer | Hang up posters for both days) |
10:45 | 11:15 | Jana Besser — Sonova, Stäfa, CH Assessment of Cognitive Load During Listening and Findings Related to Hearing-Aid Use Abstract |
11:15 | 11:45 | Rene H. Gifford — Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, US Spatial Release from Informational and Energetic Masking in Bimodal and Bilateral Cochlear Implant Users Abstract |
11:45 | 12:15 | Recipient of the Colin Cherry Award 2016 Alejandro Lopez Valdez — Trinity College Dublin, IE Assessment of Spectral Ripple Discrimination in Cochlear Implant Users: The Untold Story Abstract |
12:15 | 13:45 | Lunch (Foyer) |
13:45 | 14:45 | Keynote lecture Astrid van Wieringen — ExpORL, KU Leuven, BE A versatile view on the aging auditory system for auditory processing and speech perception Abstract |
14:45 | 15:00 | Overview of session 1 posters |
15:00 | 15:30 | Coffee break |
15:30 | 17:30 | Poster session 1 (see below) |
19:00 | ... | Dinner at restaurant Beisserei (registration required) |
Friday, January 6 | ||
08:30 | 09:00 | Coffee |
09:00 | 09:30 | Benedikt Zoefel – Medical Research Council, Cambridge, UK The Role of High-Level Processes for Oscillatory Phase Entrainment to Speech Sounds Abstract |
09:30 | 10:00 | Asger Andersen — Oticon, DK Binaural Intelligibility Prediction for Noisy and Non-linearly Processed Speech Abstract |
10:00 | 10:15 | Overview of session 2 posters |
10:15 | 10:30 | Coffee break (Foyer) |
10:30 | 12:30 | Poster session 2 (see below) |
12:30 | 13:45 | Lunch (Foyer) |
13:45 | 14:15 | Johanna Barry — Medical Research Council Institute of Hearing Research, Nottingham, UK The Impact of Noise on Speech Processing Over Extended Periods of Time: A Developmental Perspective Abstract |
14:15 | 14:45 | Christoph Scheidinger — Danish Technical University, Copenhagen, DK Modeling Speech Intelligibility based on Envelopes Derived from Auditory Spike Trains Abstract |
14:45 | 15:15 | Coffee Break (take down all posters) |
15:15 | 15:45 | Tanja Schultz — University of Bremen, DE Silent Speech Interfaces Abstract |
15:45 | 16:15 | Inga Schepers — University of Oldenburg, DE Context Shapes Neural Speech Coding: Effects of Visual Speech, Prior Auditory Speech and Listener’s Goals on Cortical and Subcortical Speech Processing Abstract |
16:15 | 16:45 | Announcement of the Colin Cherry Award 2017 recipient | Discussion |
Saturday, January 7 |
Social event: For those who would like to hang around Oldenburg a little longer, we will organize a tour of the Auditory Garden, followed by either a Bossel tour or — depending on weather — an indoor activity. If interested, please send an email to info@spin2017.de.
Posters
Poster session 1, Thursday afternoon
P13 Noise-adaptive near-end listening enhancement for normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners — Jan Rennies, Henning Schepker, David Huelsmeier, Jakob Drefs, Simon Doclo
P15 Evaluating fast-acting compression in basic psychoacoustic and speech tasks — Borys Kowalewski, Michal Fereczkowski, Ewen MacDonald, Olaf Strelcyk, Torsten Dau
P17 Speech enhancement based on neural networks improves speech intelligibility in noise for cochlear implant users — Tobias Goehring, Federico Bolner, Jessica Monaghan, Bas Van Dijk, Andrzej Zarowski, Stefan Bleeck
P19 Speech performance versus speech perception: Comparison of two different speech-in-noise tests using different microphone settings in cochlea implants — Andreas Büchner, Timo Bräcker, Manfred Schwebs, Thomas Lenarz
P21 Perception of French nasal vowels in vocoded speech: Information Transfer Rate analyses — Olivier Crouzet
P23 Channel interaction determines the best fitting strategy for cochlear implant users with ipsilateral residual acoustic hearing in a computer model — Ladan Zamaninezhad, Tim Jürgens
P25 Relation between listening effort and speech intelligibility in noise — Melanie Krueger, Michael Schulte, Thomas Brand, Kirsten C. Wagener, Markus Meis, Inga Holube
P27 Investigating the relationship between SpiN recognition, AM depth detection and evoked potentials in CI users — Saskia Waechter, Alejandro Lopez Valdes, Cristina Simoes-Franklin, Laura Viani, Richard Reilly
P29 Multisensory integration in hearing aid users and non-users with a mild hearing loss — Maike Tahden, Anja Gieseler, Hans Colonius
P31 The processing of which-questions in noise-vocoded speech — Atty Schouwenaars, Esther Ruigendijk
P33 Exploring the role of working memory for speech perception in energetic and informational masking: a dual-task study — Adam Dryden, Harriett Allen, Antje Heinrich
P35 Rhythm in plain and Lombard speech — Hans Rutger Bosker, Martin Cooke
P37 The discrimination of voice cues in simulations of bimodal electro-acoustic cochlear-implant hearing — Deniz Başkent, Annika Luckmann, Jessy Ceha, Etienne Gaudrain, Terrin Tamati
P39 Influence of background noise level on speech perception — Melanie A. Zokoll, Nina Wardenga, Hannes Maier, Thomas Brand, Birger Kollmeier
P41 Unaided and aided speech recognition performance evaluation across languages with hearing impaired patients using multilingual matrix sentence tests — Melanie A. Zokoll, Anna Warzybok, Michael Buschermöhle, Kirsten C. Wagener, Birger Kollmeier
P43 A speech-in-noise screening test for hearing loss – Evaluation of different noise types — Jon Oygarden
P45 Better-ear rating based on glimpsing and its relation to speech intelligibility — Esther Schoenmaker, Steven van de Par
P47 A test word selection and optimization method for a new Swedish test of phonetic perception in noise — Erik Witte, Claes Möller, Susanne Köbler, Jonas Ekeroot
P49 The role of short-time power and envelope power SNRs in psychoacoustic masking and speech intelligibility — Thomas Biberger, Stephan D. Ewert
P51 Computational auditory scene analysis in multi-talker environments — Angela Josupeit, Joanna Luberadzka, Volker Hohmann
P53 Predicting effects of additive noise and hearing-instrument signal processing on consonant recognition and confusions — Johannes Zaar, Torsten Dau
P55 Performance evaluation of the short-time objective intelligibility measure with different band importance functions — Asger Heidemann Andersen, Jan Mark de Haan, Zheng-Hua Tan, Jesper Jensen
P57 Decoding speaker attendance from EEG-data using deep machine learning in continuous speech — Tobias de Taillez, Birger Kollmeier, Bernd Meyer
P59 Behavioural and neural consequences of closed eyes during attentive listening — Lea-Maria Schmitt, Jonas Obleser, Malte Wöstmann
P61 Closing the efferent auditory loop: development and testing of a personalized wearable ear-EEG recording device — Gabrielle Cretot-Richert, Stefan Debener, Maarten De Vos, Martin Bleichner, Jérémie Voix
P63 Does listening effort modulate speech envelope entrainment? — Lien Decruy, Jonas Vanthornhout, Tom Francart
Poster session 2, Friday morning
P14 Effects of hearing-aid compression on amplitude modulation processing and speech recognition — Alan Wiinberg, Bastian Epp, Morten L. Jepsen, Torsten Dau
P16 Effect of low-frequency gain on speech intelligibility and sound quality in a competing voices situation — Jonas Lochner, Sébastien Santurette, Ewen MacDonald, Lars Bramsløw
P18 Congenital unilateral hearing impairment - Bone Anchored Hearing Implants in complex listening environments — Enrico Muzzi, Raffaella Marchi, Chiara Falzone, Eva Orzan
P20 Bimodal speech intelligibility: Comparison of actual patients and simulations — Ben Williges, Sven Kliesch, Lorenz Jung, Leontien Ingeborg Geven, Thomas Wesarg, Tim Jürgens
P22 Better-ear glimpsing with symmetrically-placed interferers in Bilateral cochlear implant users — Hongmei Hu, Mathias Dietz, Ben Williges, Stephan Ewert
P24 SPIRAL – a vocoder with a spiral ganglion for cochlear implant simulation — Jacques A. Grange, John F. Culling
P26 Subjective self-assessment of bimodal fusion — Niclas A. Janßen, Lars Bramsløw, Søren K. Riis, Jeremy Marozeau
P28 The spread of excitation in cochlear implants is not the only limiter of the number of effective electrodes. Implications for the channel-interleaving sound coding strategy. — Jacques A Grange, John F Culling
P30 The effect of background noise on the gestures, gaze and speech of hearing-impaired interlocutors — Lauren V. Hadley, W. Owen Brimijoin, William M. Whitmer
P32 Listening in noise: what can ability to memorise tones tell us about hearing impaired listeners? — Maja Serman, Dunja Kunke, Rosa-Linde Fischer, Ronny Hannemann, Kaja Kallisch, Jonas Obleser
P34 Lexical frequency effects in noise-induced robust misperceptions — Martin Cooke, Ricard Marxer, M. Luisa Garcia Lecumberri, Jon Barker
P36 Effects of age and multiple talking faces on the visual speech advantage in noise — Julie M. Beadle , Chris Davis , Jeesun Kim
P38 Common Sound Scenarios – A context-driven categorization of everyday sound environments for application in hearing-device research — Florian Wolters, Karolina Smeds, E Schmidt, E K Christensen, C Norup
P40 Speech intelligibility in noise in a virtual restaurant: the difficulties faced by those with hearing loss — Barry Bardsley, John F Culling
P42 Isolating the informational component of speech-on-speech masking — Axelle Calcus, Tim Schoof, Stuart Rosen, Barbara Shinn-Cunningham, Pamela Souza
P44 Learning effects in the Danish HINT — Lars Bramsløw, Lisbeth B Simonsen, Mona El Hichou, Rawan Hashem, Renskje K Hietkamp
P46 The AVATAR-approach: how real-life listening affects speech intelligibility and listening effort — Annelies Devesse, Alexander Dudek, Astrid van Wieringen, Jan Wouters
P48 Modulating speaker- and language-specific effects in speech intelligibility — Sabine Hochmuth, Marc René Schädler, Birger Kollmeier
P50 Common Audiological Functional Parameters (CAFPAs): an abstract representation of audiological expert data — Mareike Buhl, Marc René Schädler, Anna Warzybok, Birger Kollmeier
P52 A correlation metric in the envelope power spectrum domain for speech intelligibility prediction — Helia Relaño Iborra, Torsten Dau, Tobias May, Johannes Zaar, Christoph Scheidiger
P54 Prediction of speech-in-noise intelligibility by hearing-impaired listeners: a re-analysis of Summers et al. (2013) auditory processing data — Mark A Huckvale, Gaston Hilkhuysen
P56 Using models to evaluate whether spectral centroid could play a role in F0 and VTL perception in acoustic and electric hearing — Etienne Gaudrain
P58 Access to sub-lexical information affects degraded speech processing: insights from fMRI — Susann Bräuer, Inga M. Schepers, Gesa Mueller, Jochem W. Rieger
P60 Attention governs neural oscillatory responses to degraded speech — Malte Wöstmann, Sung-Joo Lim, Jonas Obleser
P62 Is speech only noise for newborn infants? Electrophysiological responses to events detected within continuous speech — Júlia Simon, Annamária Kovács, Gábor Háden, István Winkler
P64 Attentional effects on the processing of syntactic violations during listening two simultaneous speech streams — Orsolya Szalárdy, Brigitta Tóth, Dávid Farkas, Annamária Kovács, Gábor Urbán, Gábor Orosz, László Hunyadi, Tünde Szabó, Botond Hajdu, István Winkler
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