Our new study is about to be submitted! We demonstrate that the effect of a background noise on is multifaceted, even in the case of a simple stationary white noise. You can find the on @biorxivpreprint (biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/20), the raw and processed data on (zenodo.org/record/7476407#.Y67), and the document on (osf.io/4ju3f/). @psycholinguistics

@leovarnet Very excited to give this a read today. I think I'm vaguely familiar with the reverse correlation technique but really want to dig in and get to know the details. I'm hoping that maybe there's some way to use it to clear a conceptual logjam in some of my older work on the effects of noise fluctuations on speech segmentation.

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/

@ttpphd Oh Wow your work seems to be very "reverse-correlationable" indeed! Here I used the reverse-correlation technique on amplitude fluctuations in a phoneme categorization task, but I'm currently running a new experiment using it in a word segmentation task! I add your paper to my to-read list!

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