Madame Nia CASON / PhD


Music and speech are both reliant on the way that events occur in time. Dynamic attending through a mechanism of coupled oscillators (internal) with external regularity (acoustic signal) may be a process not only important in music perception (Jones & Boltz, 1989, Large & Jones, 1999), but also during speech perception (Arantes & Barbosa, 2010; Port, 2003). There may therefore be common, domain-general processes underlying prediction in time. Since musical rhythm can provide a greater regularity than speech, it may be able to boost domain-general processes important for the perception of speech. In other words, rhythmic priming (providing rhythmical cues for speech rhythm) may enhance speech processing since it allows the structure of speech to be made predictable. We have investigated this for the phonological processing of spoken pseudowords (Cason & Schön, 2012), spoken sentences (Cason, Astésano & Schön, submitted), and have investigated the impact of rhythmic priming in hearing impaired children(Cason, Hidalgo & Schön, submitted).

Contact details

Jobs

Availability : 2 2014

Mobility : Tous les pays

Research : OUI

PhD

Title : Biologie-Santé - Spécialité Neurosciences

First registration date : 1 November 2010 / 3A

Doctoral school : Sciences de la Vie et de la Santé

Thesis defense date : 9 December 2013

Subject : L'effet du rythme musical sur le parole

Thesis supervisor : SCHON Daniele

Thesis co-supervisor :

Research unit : INS - Institut de Neurosciences des Systèmes

Master's degree

Title : Music, Mind and Brain

November 2010 - University of London

Languages

Français : B1 - Intermédiaire

Anglais : C2 - Maternel