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Robert E. Wickesberg

Associate Professor
Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin

Biological Division

Office:535 Psychology Building
Phone:(217) 333-1147
Fax:(217) 244-5876
Email:wickesbe@illinois.edu

For decades speech recognition has been assumed to rely on frequency cues, but recent research has demonstrated the saliency of temporal cues. By studying how different forms of speech are encoded in the peripheral auditory system, we have identified temporal cues that are invariant across speaker and means of production. These cues work for the recognition of normal, whispered or even noise-vocoder speech. The identification of these cues is important for developing better cochlear implants, hearing aids and automatic speech recognition systems.

Representative Publication:

  • Loebach, JL and Wickesberg, RE (2008) The psychoacoustics of noise vocoded speech: A physiological means to a perceptual end. Hearing Research 241: 87-96

Classes Recently Taught:

  • Psychology 210 - The Brain and The Mind
  • Psychology 316 - Introduction to the Psychology of Hearing

 
603 East Daniel St., Champaign, IL 61820 • Phone: (217) 333-0631 • Fax: (217) 244-5876