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After March 20202020MarchFebruaryJanuary2019DecemberNovemberOctoberSeptemberAugustJulyJuneMayAprilMarchFebruaryJanuary2018DecemberNovemberOctoberSeptemberAugustJulyJuneMayAprilMarchFebruaryJanuary2017DecemberNovemberOctoberSeptemberAugustJulyJuneMayAprilMarchFebruaryJanuary2016DecemberNovemberOctoberSeptemberAugustJulyJuneMayAprilBefore April 2016 |
Schedule in June 2016The 26th Perceptual Frontier Seminar: San Francisco plus Yokohama SessionDate and time: Thursday, 16 June 2016, 18:30-20:30 The Seminar was organized as rehearsal of presentations at ICMPC14 (14th International Conference for Music Perception and Cognition, in San Francisco, CA, USA, from 5 to 9 July 2016) and at ICP2016 (International Congress of Psychology 2016, Yokohama, Japan, from 24 to 29 July 2016). It also provided an occasion to have a casual party after the presentations. 1. The perception of a dotted rhythm embedded in a two-four-time framework 2. Effects of the duration and the frequency of temporal gaps on the subjective distortedness of music fragments 3. Perceptual roles of power-fluctuation factors on noise-vocoded Japanese speech 4. Intelligibility of locally time-reversed speech in Chinese, English, German, and Japanese 5. Perceptual contrast between two adjacent time intervals marked by clicks The 27th Perceptual Frontier Seminar: Yokohama SessionDate and time: Thursday, 30 June 2016, 18:30-20:30 The Seminar was organized as rehearsal of presentations at ICP2016 (International Congress of Psychology 2016, Yokohama, Japan, from 24 to 29 July 2016). It also provided an occasion to have a casual party after the presentations. 1. Speech-to-Song Illusion in Japanese 2. Influence of the temporal-unit duration on the intelligibility of English mosaic speech 3. The effect of sound on visual grouping in a multi-stable stimulus 4. Perceptual validity and analytical advantages of non-negative bases extracted from factor analyses of Japanese speech 5. Effect of body posture on the interpretation of cast shadows 6. Change, not motion, determines subjective duration 7. Vection strength is determined by the subjective size of a visual stimulus modulated by amodal completion (preliminary results) 8. Neural correlates of auditory temporal assimilation: an EEG and MEG study |
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