| Keyword search (4,163 papers available) | ![]() |
"Deroche MLD" Authored Publications:
| Title | Authors | PubMed ID | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Use of a difference in fundamental frequency and spatial location beyond intelligibility purposes | Adams R; Deroche MLD; | 41263630 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 2 | Speech, Timbre, and Pitch Perception in Cochlear Implant Users With Flat-Panel CT-Based Frequency Reallocations: A Longitudinal Prospective Study | Gilbert ML; Lewis RM; Deroche MLD; Jiam NT; Jiradejvong P; Mo J; Cooke DL; Limb CJ; | 40689899 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 3 | The neural characteristics influencing literacy outcome in children with cochlear implants | Koirala N; Manning J; Neumann S; Anderson C; Deroche MLD; Wolfe J; Pugh K; Landi N; Muthuraman M; Gracco VL; | 40046341 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 4 | Cross-modal plasticity in children with cochlear implant: converging evidence from EEG and functional near-infrared spectroscopy | Deroche MLD; Wolfe J; Neumann S; Manning J; Hanna L; Towler W; Wilson C; Bien AG; Miller S; Schafer E; Gemignani J; Alemi R; Muthuraman M; Koirala N; Gracco VL; | 38846536 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 5 | Dynamic networks differentiate the language ability of children with cochlear implants | Koirala N; Deroche MLD; Wolfe J; Neumann S; Bien AG; Doan D; Goldbeck M; Muthuraman M; Gracco VL; | 37409105 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 6 | Grouping by Time and Pitch Facilitates Free but Not Cued Recall for Word Lists in Normally-Hearing Listeners | Sares AG; Gilbert AC; Zhang Y; Iordanov M; Lehmann A; Deroche MLD; | 37338981 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 7 | Visual biases in evaluation of speakers' and singers' voice type by cis and trans listeners | Marchand Knight J; Sares AG; Deroche MLD; | 37205083 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 8 | Auditory evoked response to an oddball paradigm in children wearing cochlear implants | Deroche MLD; Wolfe J; Neumann S; Manning J; Towler W; Alemi R; Bien AG; Koirala N; Hanna L; Henry L; Gracco VL; | 36965466 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 9 | Luminance effects on pupil dilation in speech-in-noise recognition | Zhang Y; Malaval F; Lehmann A; Deroche MLD; | 36459511 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 10 | Predicting emotion perception abilities for cochlear implant users | Paquette S; Deroche MLD; Goffi-Gomez MV; Hoshino ACH; Lehmann A; | 36047767 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 11 | Specificity of Affective Responses in Misophonia Depends on Trigger Identification | Savard MA; Sares AG; Coffey EBJ; Deroche MLD; | 35692416 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 12 | Cochlear Implant Compression Optimization for Musical Sound Quality in MED-EL Users | Gilbert ML; Deroche MLD; Jiradejvong P; Chan Barrett K; Limb CJ; | 34812791 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 13 | Adaptation to pitch-altered feedback is independent of one's own voice pitch sensitivity. | Alemi R, Lehmann A, Deroche MLD | 33033324 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 14 | Neural Correlates of Vocal Pitch Compensation in Individuals Who Stutter. | Sares AG, Deroche MLD, Ohashi H, Shiller DM, Gracco VL | 32161525 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 15 | Perception of Child-Directed Versus Adult-Directed Emotional Speech in Pediatric Cochlear Implant Users. | Barrett KC, Chatterjee M, Caldwell MT, Deroche MLD, Jiradejvong P, Kulkarni AM, Limb CJ | 32149924 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 16 | Processing of Acoustic Information in Lexical Tone Production and Perception by Pediatric Cochlear Implant Recipients. | Deroche MLD, Lu HP, Lin YS, Chatterjee M, Peng SC | 31281237 PSYCHOLOGY |
| Title: | Visual biases in evaluation of speakers' and singers' voice type by cis and trans listeners | ||||
| Authors: | Marchand Knight J, Sares AG, Deroche MLD | ||||
| Link: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37205083/ | ||||
| DOI: | 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1046672 | ||||
| Publication: | Frontiers in psychology | ||||
| Keywords: | FACH; audio-visual integration; gender studies; implicit bias; trans voice; voice timbre; | ||||
| PMID: | 37205083 | Category: | Date Added: | 2023-05-19 | |
| Dept Affiliation: | PSYCHOLOGY | ||||
Description: |
Introduction: A singer's or speaker's Fach (voice type) should be appraised based on acoustic cues characterizing their voice. Instead, in practice, it is often influenced by the individual's physical appearance. This is especially distressful for transgender people who may be excluded from formal singing because of perceived mismatch between their voice and appearance. To eventually break down these visual biases, we need a better understanding of the conditions under which they occur. Specifically, we hypothesized that trans listeners (not actors) would be better able to resist such biases, relative to cis listeners, precisely because they would be more aware of appearance-voice dissociations. Methods: In an online study, 85 cisgender and 81 transgender participants were presented with 18 different actors singing or speaking short sentences. These actors covered six voice categories from high/bright (traditionally feminine) to low/dark (traditionally masculine) voices: namely soprano, mezzo-soprano (referred to henceforth as mezzo), contralto (referred to henceforth as alto), tenor, baritone, and bass. Every participant provided voice type ratings for (1) Audio-only (A) stimuli to get an unbiased estimate of a given actor's voice type, (2) Video-only (V) stimuli to get an estimate of the strength of the bias itself, and (3) combined Audio-Visual (AV) stimuli to see how much visual cues would affect the evaluation of the audio. Results: Results demonstrated that visual biases are not subtle and hold across the entire scale, shifting voice appraisal by about a third of the distance between adjacent voice types (for example, a third of the bass-to-baritone distance). This shift was 30% smaller for trans than for cis listeners, confirming our main hypothesis. This pattern was largely similar whether actors sung or spoke, though singing overall led to more feminine/high/bright ratings. Conclusion: This study is one of the first demonstrations that transgender listeners are in fact better judges of a singer's or speaker's voice type because they are better able to separate the actors' voice from their appearance, a finding that opens exciting avenues to fight more generally against implicit (or sometimes explicit) biases in voice appraisal. |



