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Dive into the research topics where Natalya Kaganovich is active.

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Featured researches published by Natalya Kaganovich.


Brain Research | 2006

Electrophysiological evidence for early interaction between talker and linguistic information during speech perception

Natalya Kaganovich; Alexander L. Francis; Robert D. Melara

This study combined behavioral and electrophysiological measurements to investigate interactions during speech perception between native phonemes and talkers voice. In a Garner selective attention task, participants either classified each sound as one of two native vowels ([epsilon] and [ae]), ignoring the talker, or as one of two male talkers, ignoring the vowel. The dimension to be ignored was held constant in baseline tasks and changed randomly across trials in filtering tasks. Irrelevant variation in talker produced as much filtering interference (i.e., poorer performance in filtering relative to baseline) in classifying vowels as vice versa, suggesting that the two dimensions strongly interact. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded to identify the processing origin of the interference: an early disruption in extracting dimension-specific information or a later disruption in selecting appropriate responses. Processing in the filtering task was characterized by a sustained negativity starting 100 ms after stimulus onset and peaking 200 ms later. The early onset of this negativity suggests that interference originates in the cognitive effort required by listeners to extract dimension-specific information, a process that precedes response selection. In agreement with these findings, our results revealed numerous dimension-specific effects, most prominently in the filtering tasks.


Developmental Neuropsychology | 2010

Non-Linguistic Auditory Processing and Working Memory Update in Pre-School Children Who Stutter: An Electrophysiological Study

Natalya Kaganovich; Amanda Hampton Wray; Christine Weber-Fox

Non-linguistic auditory processing and working memory update were examined with event-related potentials (ERPs) in 18 children who stutter (CWS) and 18 children who do not stutter (CWNS). Children heard frequent 1 kHz tones interspersed with rare 2 kHz tones. The two groups did not differ on any measure of the P1 and N1 components, strongly suggesting that early auditory processing of pure tones is unimpaired in CWS. However, as a group, only CWNS exhibited a P3 component to rare tones, suggesting that developmental stuttering may be associated with a less efficient attentional allocation and working memory update in response to auditory change.


Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research | 2014

Children with a history of SLI show reduced sensitivity to audiovisual temporal asynchrony: an ERP study.

Natalya Kaganovich; Jennifer Schumaker; Laurence B. Leonard; Dana Gustafson; Danielle Macias

PURPOSE The authors examined whether school-age children with a history of specific language impairment (H-SLI), their peers with typical development (TD), and adults differ in sensitivity to audiovisual temporal asynchrony and whether such difference stems from the sensory encoding of audiovisual information. METHOD Fifteen H-SLI children, 15 TD children, and 15 adults judged whether a flashed explosion-shaped figure and a 2-kHz pure tone occurred simultaneously. The stimuli were presented at 0-, 100-, 200-, 300-, 400-, and 500-ms temporal offsets. This task was combined with EEG recordings. RESULTS H-SLI children were profoundly less sensitive to temporal separations between auditory and visual modalities compared with their TD peers. Those H-SLI children who performed better at simultaneity judgment also had higher language aptitude. TD children were less accurate than adults, revealing a remarkably prolonged developmental course of the audiovisual temporal discrimination. Analysis of early event-related potential components suggested that poor sensory encoding was not a key factor in H-SLI childrens reduced sensitivity to audiovisual asynchrony. CONCLUSIONS Audiovisual temporal discrimination is impaired in H-SLI children and is still immature during mid-childhood in TD children. The present findings highlight the need for further evaluation of the role of atypical audiovisual processing in the development of SLI.


Brain and Language | 2014

Audiovisual integration for speech during mid-childhood: Electrophysiological evidence

Natalya Kaganovich; Jennifer Schumaker

Previous studies have demonstrated that the presence of visual speech cues reduces the amplitude and latency of the N1 and P2 event-related potential (ERP) components elicited by speech stimuli. However, the developmental trajectory of this effect is not yet fully mapped. We examined ERP responses to auditory, visual, and audiovisual speech in two groups of school-age children (7-8-year-olds and 10-11-year-olds) and in adults. Audiovisual speech led to the attenuation of the N1 and P2 components in all groups of participants, suggesting that the neural mechanisms underlying these effects are functional by early school years. Additionally, while the reduction in N1 was largest over the right scalp, the P2 attenuation was largest over the left and midline scalp. The difference in the hemispheric distribution of the N1 and P2 attenuation supports the idea that these components index at least somewhat disparate neural processes within the context of audiovisual speech perception.


Neuropsychologia | 2016

Electrophysiological correlates of individual differences in perception of audiovisual temporal asynchrony.

Natalya Kaganovich; Jennifer Schumaker

Sensitivity to the temporal relationship between auditory and visual stimuli is key to efficient audiovisual integration. However, even adults vary greatly in their ability to detect audiovisual temporal asynchrony. What underlies this variability is currently unknown. We recorded event-related potentials (ERPs) while participants performed a simultaneity judgment task on a range of audiovisual (AV) and visual-auditory (VA) stimulus onset asynchronies (SOAs) and compared ERP responses in good and poor performers to the 200ms SOA, which showed the largest individual variability in the number of synchronous perceptions. Analysis of ERPs to the VA200 stimulus yielded no significant results. However, those individuals who were more sensitive to the AV200 SOA had significantly more positive voltage between 210 and 270ms following the sound onset. In a follow-up analysis, we showed that the mean voltage within this window predicted approximately 36% of variability in sensitivity to AV temporal asynchrony in a larger group of participants. The relationship between the ERP measure in the 210-270ms window and accuracy on the simultaneity judgment task also held for two other AV SOAs with significant individual variability -100 and 300ms. Because the identified window was time-locked to the onset of sound in the AV stimulus, we conclude that sensitivity to AV temporal asynchrony is shaped to a large extent by the efficiency in the neural encoding of sound onsets.


Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders | 2016

Atypical audiovisual word processing in school-age children with a history of specific language impairment: an event-related potential study

Natalya Kaganovich; Jennifer Schumaker; Courtney Rowland

BackgroundVisual speech cues influence different aspects of language acquisition. However, whether developmental language disorders may be associated with atypical processing of visual speech is unknown. In this study, we used behavioral and ERP measures to determine whether children with a history of SLI (H-SLI) differ from their age-matched typically developing (TD) peers in the ability to match auditory words with corresponding silent visual articulations.MethodsNineteen 7–13-year-old H-SLI children and 19 age-matched TD children participated in the study. Children first heard a word and then saw a speaker silently articulating a word. In half of trials, the articulated word matched the auditory word (congruent trials), while in another half, it did not (incongruent trials). Children specified whether the auditory and the articulated words matched. We examined ERPs elicited by the onset of visual stimuli (visual P1, N1, and P2) as well as ERPs elicited by the articulatory movements themselves—namely, N400 to incongruent articulations and late positive complex (LPC) to congruent articulations. We also examined whether ERP measures of visual speech processing could predict (1) children’s linguistic skills and (2) the use of visual speech cues when listening to speech-in-noise (SIN).ResultsH-SLI children were less accurate in matching auditory words with visual articulations. They had a significantly reduced P1 to the talker’s face and a smaller N400 to incongruent articulations. In contrast, congruent articulations elicited LPCs of similar amplitude in both groups of children. The P1 and N400 amplitude was significantly correlated with accuracy enhancement on the SIN task when seeing the talker’s face.ConclusionsH-SLI children have poorly defined correspondences between speech sounds and visually observed articulatory movements that produce them.


Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research | 2017

Sensitivity to Audiovisual Temporal Asynchrony in Children With a History of Specific Language Impairment and Their Peers With Typical Development: A Replication and Follow-Up Study

Natalya Kaganovich

Purpose Earlier, my colleagues and I showed that children with a history of specific language impairment (H-SLI) are significantly less able to detect audiovisual asynchrony compared with children with typical development (TD; Kaganovich & Schumaker, 2014). Here, I first replicate this finding in a new group of children with H-SLI and TD and then examine a relationship among audiovisual function, attention skills, and language in a combined pool of children. Method The stimuli were a pure tone and an explosion-shaped figure. Stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) varied from 0-500 ms. Children pressed 1 button for perceived synchrony and another for asynchrony. I measured the number of synchronous perceptions at each SOA and calculated childrens temporal binding windows. I, then, conducted multiple regressions to determine if audiovisual processing and attention can predict language skills. Results As in the earlier study, children with H-SLI perceived asynchrony significantly less frequently than children with TD at SOAs of 400-500 ms. Their temporal binding windows were also larger. Temporal precision and attention predicted 23%-37% of childrens language ability. Conclusions Audiovisual temporal processing is impaired in children with H-SLI. The degree of this impairment is a predictor of language skills. Once understood, the mechanisms underlying this deficit may become a new focus for language remediation.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2006

Selective attention and perceptual learning of speech

Alexander L. Francis; Natalya Kaganovich; Courtney Driscoll

Phonetic experience can change the perceptual distance between speech sounds, increasing both within‐category similarity and between‐category distinctiveness. Such warping of perceptual space is frequently characterized in terms of changes in selective attention: Listeners are assumed to attend more strongly to category‐differentiating features while ignoring less relevant ones. However, the link between the distribution of selective attention and categorization‐related differences in perceptual distance has not been empirically demonstrated. To explore this relationship, listeners were given 6 h of training to categorize sounds according to one of two acoustic features while ignoring the other. The features were voice onset time and onset f0, which are normally correlated and can both serve as a cue to consonant voicing. Before and after training, listener’s performance on a Garner selective attention task was compared with assessment of the perceptual distance between tokens. Results suggest that traini...


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2008

Cue-specific effects of categorization training on the relative weighting of acoustic cues to consonant voicing in English

Alexander L. Francis; Natalya Kaganovich; Courtney Driscoll-Huber


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Musicians show general enhancement of complex sound encoding and better inhibition of irrelevant auditory change in music: an ERP study.

Natalya Kaganovich; Jihyun Kim; Caryn Herring; Jennifer Schumaker; Megan K. MacPherson; Christine Weber-Fox

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