SPIN2022 will beĀ online!
Talks will be shared as Zoom webinars and poster sessions will take place in GatherTown. The meeting will start around 9:00 CET, and end around 17:00 CET.
Registration is now open!
Note that we will need to make bandwidth pre-reservations that depend on the number of registered participants. So we would appreciate if you registered only if you really intending to attend.
The registration deadline is Sunday 19 December.
Preliminary programme
Keynote Lecture:
Carolyn McGettigan
VoCoLab, University College London, United-Kingdom
Confirmed speakers are:
- Hans Rutger Bosker
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, NL
Ignoring people at a cocktail party: testing which acoustic characteristics of ignored speech influence attended speech perception - Samuel El BouzaĆÆdi Tiali
Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Univ. Savoie Mont Blanc, CNRS, LPNC, Grenoble, FR
Homophone processing during speech-in-speech situation and cognitive control implication - Janina Fels
Institute for Hearing Technology and Acoustics, RWTH Aachen University, DE
Challenges and methods to design a child-appropriate speech-in-noise experiment in spatial auditory environments for young children - SƩbastien Ferreira
AuthƓt, Ivry, FR
Prediction of the ASR quality by analysis of the sound environment - Anna Fiveash
Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, INSERM, CNRS, University of Lyon 1, France
Regular rhythmic primes do not (always) benefit speech-in-noise perception: Evidence for distinct outcomes for temporal attention depending on speech-in-noise manipulations - Inga Holube
Institute of Hearing Technology and Audiology, Jade University of Applied Sciences, Oldenburg, DE
Text-to-speech and back ā new ways in speech audiometry - Ulrich Hoppe
Department of Audiology, ENT-clinic, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, DE
Speech Recognition in Quiet and in Noise in a large group of Bimodal (CI + HA) Listeners - Hae-Sung Jeon
UCLan, Preston, UK
Perception of dynamic pitch in speech - Bethany Plain
Amsterdam UMC, NL | Eriksholm Research Centre, Snekkersten, DK
The impact of social observation during a speech-in-noise task: insights from cardiovascular and pupil responses of listeners with hearing loss - Emmanuel Ponsot
Ghent University, BE
Impact of cochlear synaptopathy on speech-in-noise perception: Psychophysical and electrophysiological markers based on temporal fine structure coding fidelity - Cas Smits
Amsterdam UMC, Dept. of Otolaryngology ā Head and Neck Surgery, Amsterdam, NL
A method to convert between Speech Recognition Thresholds (SRT) and percentage-correct scores for speech-in-noise tests