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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Predictive Coding: How the Human Brain Uses Context to Facilitate the Perception of Degraded Speech

Wild, Conor 25 September 2012 (has links)
The most common and natural human behaviours are often the most computationally difficult to understand. This is especially true of spoken language comprehension considering the acoustic ambiguities inherent in a speech stream, and that these ambiguities are exacerbated by the noisy and distracting listening conditions of everyday life. Nonetheless, the human brain is capable of rapidly and reliably processing speech in these situations with deceptive ease – a feat that remains unrivaled by state-of-the-art speech recognition technologies. It has long been known that supportive context facilitates robust speech perception, but it remains unclear how the brain integrates contextual information with an acoustically degraded speech signal. The four studies in this dissertation utilize behavioural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) methods to examine how the normally functioning human brain uses context to support the perception of degraded speech. First, I have observed that text presented simultaneously with distorted sentences results in an illusory experience of perceptually clearer speech, and that this illusion depends on the amount of distortion in the bottom-up signal, and on the relative timing between the visual and auditory stimuli. Second, fMRI data indicate that activity in the earliest region of primary auditory cortex is sensitive to the perceived clarity of speech, and that this modulation of activity likely comes from left frontal cortical regions that probably support higher-order linguistic processes. Third, conscious awareness of the visual stimulus appears to be necessary to increase the intelligibility of degraded speech, and thus attention might also be required for multisensory integration. Finally, I have demonstrated that attention greatly enhances the processing of degraded speech, and this enhancement is (again) supported by the recruitment of higher-order cortical areas. The results of these studies provide converging evidence that brain uses prior knowledge to actively predict the form of a degraded auditory signal, and that these predictions are projected through feedback connections from higher- to lower-order order areas. These findings are consistent with a predictive coding model of perception, which provides an elegant mechanism in which accurate interpretations of the environment are constructed from ambiguous inputs in way that is flexible and task dependent. / Thesis (Ph.D, Neuroscience Studies) -- Queen's University, 2012-09-25 10:48:50.73
2

Efficacité comparée de différentes formes de « modèles ajustés » pour l’acquisition de tâches gymniques : rôle des « Coping modèles » et de l’Imitation Modélisation Interactive / Comparing various adjusted forms of modeling : the role of « coping models » and “Interactive models” for the acquisition of gymnic skills

Martin, Liza 13 December 2011 (has links)
Ce travail de recherche examine les conditions d’efficacité de procédures ajustées de modélisation pour l’apprentissage d’habiletés gymniques, et en particulier des « coping models ». Il mesure les effets de différents types de démonstration sur le processus d’acquisition et les réponses psychologiques de débutantes en gymnastique. Le cadre théorique-support concerne la psychologie sociale du développement et des acquisitions. Notre démarche empirique convoque un contexte virtuel (première étude) et un contexte plus naturel et écologique, faisant intervenir des modèles vivants (les deuxième et troisième expérimentations). Les résultats mettent en évidence la supériorité des guidages ajustés, tant sur l’amélioration motrice que les états psychologiques conditionnant l’apprentissage. Les données recueillies à l’issue des trois expériences montrent que les « coping models » seraient particulièrement efficaces dans le cas où la tâche est anxiogène et acrobatique. Les modèles « Imitation Modélisation Interactive » offrent des bénéfices très intéressants dans les situations d’acquisition de tâches non-anxiogènes. De manière sous-jacente, les protocoles soulignent la nécessité et la pertinence de dispositifs de formation au modeling en contexte scolaire. / The aim of this study is to examine the effectiveness of various forms of modeling, and particularly coping models. This work assesses the effects of different types of demonstrations on the learning process and psychological responses. The theoretical framework is social psychology of development and learning. Our empirical intervention considers both a virtual context (1st study) and a context more ecological, using peer live models (2nd and 3rd studies). Results emphasize the superiority of adjusted and progressive demonstrations, both for motor learning and for psychological states influencing performance. Coping models show particular effectiveness when the task to be learned is stressful. Interactive models are really helpful for the gymnic skill towards which learners don’t feel anxious. Data collected also suggest the necessity and benefits of training programs for models.

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