item3

What's New | Greetings | Schedule | Members | Contact | Japanese

After March 2020

2020

March

February

January

2019

December

November

October

September

August

July

June

May

April

March

February

January

2018

December

November

October

September

August

July

June

May

April

March

February

January

2017

December

November

October

September

August

July

June

May

April

March

February

January

2016

December

November

October

September

August

July

June

May

April

Before April 2016

Schedule in June 2016


The 26th Perceptual Frontier Seminar: San Francisco plus Yokohama Session

Date and time: Thursday, 16 June 2016, 18:30-20:30
Venue: 411, 1st floor, Build. 4, Ohashi Campus, Kyushu University
Organizer: Gerard B. REMIJN (Kyushu University/ReCAPS)

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
Chinami Onishi, Yoshitaka Nakajma, Emi Hasuo

2. Effects of the duration and the frequency of temporal gaps on the subjective distortedness of music fragments
Kunito Iida, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Kazuo Ueda, Gerard B. Remijn, Yukihiro Serizawa

3. Perceptual roles of power-fluctuation factors on noise-vocoded Japanese speech
Takuya Kishida, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Kazuo Ueda, Gerard B. Remijn

4. Intelligibility of locally time-reversed speech in Chinese, English, German, and Japanese
Kazuo Ueda, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Shunsuke Tamura, Akihiko Shichida, Wolfgang Ellermeier, Florian Kattner, Stephan Daebler, Ngar Nie Neo

5. Perceptual contrast between two adjacent time intervals marked by clicks
Yoshitaka Nakajima, Mizuki Matsuda, Erika Tomimatsu, and Emi Hasuo
[Abstract] Stimulus patterns of two adjacent time intervals, T1 and T2, marked by clicks were employed, and either T1 or T2 served as a standard time interval to which a separate comparison time interval was adjusted to be subjectively equal.  Both T1 and T2 were varied from 100 to 600 ms.  T2 was overestimated by 60-140 ms when T1 ≤ 200 ms and T1+300 ≤ T2 ms.  T1 was also overestimated, but to a smaller extent, when T2 ≤ 200 [ms] and T1 = T2+100 or T2+200 [ms].

Photos


The 27th Perceptual Frontier Seminar: Yokohama Session

Date and time: Thursday, 30 June 2016, 18:30-20:30
Venue: 411, 1st floor, Build. 4, Ohashi Campus, Kyushu University
Organizer: Gerard B. REMIJN (Kyushu University/ReCAPS)

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
Asuka Ono, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Kazuo Ueda, Gerard B. Remijn

2.  Influence of the temporal-unit duration on the intelligibility of English mosaic speech
Kaori Kojima, Yoshitaka Nakajima

3. The effect of sound on visual grouping in a multi-stable stimulus
Hiroaki Yano, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Kazuo Ueda, Gerard B. Remijn

4. Perceptual validity and analytical advantages of non-negative bases extracted from factor analyses of Japanese speech
Kanshi Nakao, Takuya Kishida, Yoshitaka Nakajima

5. Effect of body posture on the interpretation of cast shadows
Tomomi Koizumi, Hiroyuki Ito, Shoji Sunaga, Erika Tomimatsu

6. Change, not motion, determines subjective duration
Erika Tomimatsu, Yoshitaka Nakajima, Mark A. Elliott, Hiroyuki Ito

7. Vection strength is determined by the subjective size of a visual stimulus modulated by amodal completion (preliminary results)
Masaki Ogawa, Takeharu Seno, Hiroyuki Ito, Katsunori Okajima

8. Neural correlates of auditory temporal assimilation: an EEG and MEG study
Takako Mitsudo

Photos

What's New | Greetings | Schedule | Members | Contact | Japanese

Last updated:
Copyright (c) 2013-2020 Research Center for Applied Perceptual Science, Kyushu University. All rights reserved.