To read as well
Centre de conférence Valpré
1 chemin de Chalin - 69130 Ecully
Sessions and invited speakers:
1. Hearing the target
John Culling (Cardiff University, UK): “Energetic masking of speech in noise”
Enrique Lopez-Poveda (University of Salamanca, Spain): "Physiological Mechanisms for Hearing in Noise (without and with Cochlear Implants)"
2. Extracting the target: disentangling and attending to the target
Virginia Best (Boston University, USA): “Informational masking and speech intelligibility”
Aurélie Bidet-Caulet (ex-CeLyA, INS, Marseille): “How to escape auditory distraction: Selection and inhibition”
Elana Zion Golumbic (Bar Ilan University, Israel): “Studying attention in multi-speaker environments: between focused attention, divided attention and distraction”
Annie Moulin (CeLyA, CRNL, Lyon): “Understanding the target: contextual influences on speech intelligibility”
3. Impairments and prosthetic devices
Kathryn Arehart (University of Colorado, USA): “Effects of hearing loss, distortion and working memory on older listeners’ ability to understand speech”
Ingrid Johnsrude (University of Western Ontario, Canada): “General cognitive ability and individual differences in hearing aid outcomes”
Jim Kates (University of Colorado, USA) “Introduction on signal processing in hearing aids”
Sébastien Santurette (Oticon, Denmark): “Aided hearing in noise: advances and challenges for modern hearing aids”
4. Models
Jim Kates (University of Colorado, USA): “Using intelligibility and quality metrics to evaluate hearing aids”
Mathieu Lavandier (CeLyA, LTDS, ENTPE, Lyon): “Binaural speech intelligibility models”
5. New measures for hearing in noise (realistic tests and objective methods through the eyes and light)
Jorg Buchholz (Macquarie University, Australia): “Realistic speech in noise testing”
Thomas Koelewijn (University Medical Center Groningen, The Netherlands): “The impact of hearing impairment on the attention-related pupil dilation response”
Ingrid Johnsrude (University of Western Ontario, Canada): "Different types of speech material afford surprisingly different hearing behaviour"
Guillaume Andéol (Institut de recherche biomédicale des armées, Paris): “Using optical brain imaging to investigate speech perception in noise”