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1 te of tissue vibration in the sound source ("pitch").
2 around a mediolaterally-oriented axis (i.e., pitch).
3 d with different auditory tones (high or low pitch).
4 tion between electrodes as a function of the pitch.
5 a principal axis of rotation: yaw, roll, and pitch.
6 cal membrane surfaces of different radii and pitch.
7 number of tones in the pre-specified, target pitch.
8  vowels and to dynamic cues for intonational pitch.
9  the complex perceptual structure of musical pitch.
10 r-normalized relative pitch but not absolute pitch.
11 nt structure and the macroscopic cholesteric pitch.
12 o and focus on two muscles controlling sound pitch.
13 rm, with each motor representing a different pitch.
14 hell thickness and p the cholesteric helical pitch.
15 ically arranged, internal representations of pitch.
16 hat result in superior time encoding for low pitches.
17 l conductivities for nanomeshes with smaller pitches.
18 m is often carried by instruments with lower pitches.
19 s with balanced harmonic-to-noise ratios and pitches.
20 lices with programmed handedness and helical pitches.
21 are for landing with leg adjustments or body pitching.
22 focused filter state, which is at the higher pitch (1-2 kHz) and formed by merging two formants, ther
23 h variation of geometric parameters, such as pitch (10-50 mum), pillar diameter (5-40 mum), and heigh
24 -time signal processor briefly perturbed the pitch (100 cents, 400 ms) of their auditory feedback.
25  less than the level expected from the pixel pitch (20/420).
26 ials, including the crafting of a two-minute pitch - a valuable skill for all scientists.
27 talk?" The chalk talk is many things-a sales pitch, a teaching demonstration, a barrage of questions,
28 he simple expedient of modifying the helical pitch adjacent to the catalytic center.
29 via 12 motors that are arranged in ascending pitch along the forearm, with each motor representing a
30 gic agonist carbachol into HVC increased the pitch, amplitude, tempo and stereotypy of song, similar
31 rs were engaged in a task requiring explicit pitch analysis.
32 elicity remained right-handed with a 1.3 mum pitch and 0.14 mum helix radius, which is consistent wit
33 ic sound is a combination of the fundamental pitch and a focused filter state, which is at the higher
34 ge shifts in learned vocal features, such as pitch and amplitude, without grossly disrupting the song
35 se that human auditory cortex (AC) processes pitch and consonance through a common neural network mec
36                    The SPs have smaller mode pitch and different (often opposite) rotation velocity c
37 the world-contrast and luminance for vision, pitch and intensity for sound-and assemble a stimulus se
38 ry appears to determine reliance on f0-based pitch and may explain its importance in music, in which
39 stances in an acoustic space defined by mean pitch and mean amplitude, measured from the child's pers
40 oparticle single helices, varying in helical pitch and nanoparticle dimensions, that is assembled usi
41 he first time, distinct cortical encoding of pitch and note-onset expectations during naturalistic mu
42                       The helical centerline pitch and radius of wild-type H. pylori cells dictate su
43 tigate the role of the left and right SMG in pitch and rhythm memory in non-musicians.
44     In each session participants completed a pitch and rhythm recognition memory task immediately aft
45 eech (IDS), a communicative code with unique pitch and rhythmic characteristics relative to adult-dir
46                                              Pitch and roll orientation tuning is anchored to gravity
47  acceleration and the rate of change of body pitch and roll, may enable researchers to refine movemen
48 so promotes interactions along both the long-pitch and short-pitch helices.
49  the stimuli.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Although pitch and timbre are generally thought of as independent
50                 Previous work indicates that pitch and timbre are processed in overlapping regions of
51 he results therefore show that variations in pitch and timbre are represented by overlapping neural n
52                      SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Pitch and timbre are two crucial aspects of auditory per
53                                              Pitch and timbre are two primary dimensions of auditory
54                                              Pitch and timbre are two primary features of auditory pe
55 eparability of the neural representations of pitch and timbre at the univariate level.
56      This study tested whether variations in pitch and timbre elicit activity in distinct regions of
57                          While variations in pitch and timbre may negatively affect CI users' speech
58 lts confirm that the computations underlying pitch and timbre perception are subserved by strongly ov
59                        This study shows that pitch and timbre variations are represented in overlappi
60 ris), using tone sequences that vary in both pitch and timbre.
61 fferences exist in the cues used to perceive pitch and whether these can be accounted for by differen
62 d two sentences spoken that differed only in pitch and/or duration cues and selected the best match f
63 -cultural presence of logarithmic scales for pitch, and biological constraints on the limits of pitch
64 ength, body angle, head roll, head yaw, head pitch, and path and speed of hand movements.
65             The similarities in screw sense, pitch, and polarity between peptide alpha-helices and ol
66 and aperiodic nanomeshes of the same average pitch, and reduced thermal conductivities for nanomeshes
67  lighting, words independently of volume and pitch, and smells independently of concentration.
68  brief sounds of rising, falling or constant pitches, and in the absence of visual information of the
69 ronization, and harmonization of rhythms and pitches, and summarize empirical evidence for these link
70 oughout the belts on the energy spectrum and pitch angle (angle between the velocity of a particle an
71 ity, instead relying on rapid changes in the pitch angle (wing rotation) at the end of each half-stro
72        Our results indicate that the helical pitch angle of MreB inversely correlates with the cell d
73 ng of the evolution of the electron flux and pitch angle show that electromagnetic ion cyclotron wave
74  humans, are strongly biased to use absolute pitch (AP) in melody recognition.
75                                     Absolute pitch (AP), the ability of some musicians to precisely i
76 ble encoding.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Absolute pitch (AP), the ability of some musicians to precisely i
77 ies-their ability to tell two tones close in pitch apart.
78 ing (NH) adults, this linguistic pressure on pitch appears to sharpen its neural encoding and can lea
79 he acoustical properties of the voice (e.g., pitch) are very powerful cues when forming social impres
80 ults highlight the potential of chewed birch pitch as a source of ancient DNA.
81 nstructed parallel CNT arrays with a uniform pitch as small as 10.4 nanometers, at an angular deviati
82 al Hall effect and an incommensurate helical pitch as small as 2.8 nm in metallic Gd(3)Ru(4)Al(12), w
83 f normative phenomena in general - which are pitched as not totally empirical - and empirical account
84 ctures with sub-1 nm domains and full domain pitches as small as 1.2 nm.
85 ctral coding is sufficient to elicit complex pitch at high frequencies has important implications for
86                                 The lamellar pitch at the end of the second growth step was larger th
87 occurring in speech and music evoke a strong pitch at their fundamental frequency (F0), especially wh
88 rstood rotational mechanisms that occur when pitching at the end of each half-stroke.
89                                              Pitch-balanced helical elements of alternating handednes
90 stroma lamellae are connected by an array of pitch-balanced right- and left-handed helical membrane s
91 etic route to tune the color of In(2)O(3) to pitch black by controlling its degree of non-stoichiomet
92                       Cochlear filtering and pitch both play key roles in our ability to parse the au
93 ght STG induced "music arrest" and errors in pitch but did not affect language processing.
94  the encoding of speaker-normalized relative pitch but not absolute pitch.
95 site order produced no change in the feature pitch but rather only linear feature extension.
96  and biological constraints on the limits of pitch, but indicate that octave equivalence may be cultu
97                         Most remarkable, the pitch can be tuned through the composition of the copoly
98 ht, diameter, carbon isotope discrimination, pitch canker resistance), and molecular traits such as m
99 l field changes with experience to acquire a pitch change's meaning.
100 flippers to perform maneuvers such as rolls, pitch changes and turns [1].
101 h autism have enhanced neural sensitivity to pitch changes in nonspeech stimuli but not to lexical to
102 s the right is specialized for processing of pitch changes in speech affecting prosody.
103 estern music, melody is commonly conveyed by pitch changes in the highest-register voice, whereas met
104 g after a sound ends can be tuned to how the pitch changes in time, and that this response in a secon
105 irty-one patients had surgery for AHP in the pitch (chin up/down) position, whereas 119 had surgery f
106 The dual mode display device employing short pitch cholesteric film is able to function on demand und
107 st that the two dimensions of musical pitch, pitch class and pitch height, are mapped to the hue-satu
108 onic pitch classes that referred to the same pitch class with a different name produced color sensati
109 sensations according to the name of the base pitch class, e.g., a reddish color for do-sharp and a ye
110                                              Pitch class-color synesthesia represents a newly describ
111 ue/brightness) in 15 subjects who possessed "pitch class-color synesthesia".
112                          We investigated how pitch classes (do, re, mi, etc.) are associated with the
113 t averaging of reported colors revealed that pitch classes have rainbow hues, beginning with do-red,
114                                   Enharmonic pitch classes that referred to the same pitch class with
115            Finally, an efficient uniform CNN pitch classification model for all five types of sample
116       The two primary theories of peripheral pitch coding involve stimulus-driven spike timing, or ph
117  the Prognosis of Intracerebral Haemorrhage (PITCH) cohort who were admitted to Lille University Hosp
118  time of concurrent pitches; here, consonant pitch combinations were decoded faster than dissonant co
119 g their finger to be longer after the rising pitch condition.
120 rophobic groove, thereby promoting the short-pitch conformation.
121 ates movement of Arp2 and Arp3 into a "short-pitch" conformation that mimics the arrangement of actin
122 ned to sentences that varied in intonational pitch contour, phonetic content, and speaker.
123 rong age effects suggest that sensitivity to pitch contours reaches adult-like levels early in tonal
124 alize more easily to ecologically irrelevant pitch contours.
125 ategories.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT A whistle's pitch conveys meaning to its listener, as when dogs lear
126 orted that micro- and nano-scale topographic pitch created on silk films mimic features of the cornea
127 the current study that various topographical pitch created on silk may affect corneal epithelial stem
128 ferences in the relative salience of the two pitch cues can be attributed to differences in cochlear
129                 Accordingly, they downweight pitch cues during speech perception and instead rely on
130 en's Mismatch Responses (MMRs) to equivalent pitch deviations representing within-category and betwee
131  that participants were able to discriminate pitch differences at a similar performance level to that
132 infant response and adult inter-vocalisation pitch differences were smaller following the receipt of
133  grating structures in BCP films with a half-pitch dimension of 9.3 nm.
134 s to examine the relationships between vocal pitch discrimination abilities and vocal responses to au
135        Children with less sensitive auditory pitch discrimination abilities had significantly larger
136        Children with less sensitive auditory pitch discrimination abilities may rely more on auditory
137 Here, we assessed 918 healthy volunteers for pitch discrimination abilities-their ability to tell two
138 ided into two groups based on their auditory pitch discrimination abilities; children within two stan
139                                This enhanced pitch discrimination has the potential to significantly
140 out the use of timing information, we tested pitch discrimination of very high-frequency tones (>8 kH
141                       In an auditory spatial pitch discrimination task, we modulated the location (le
142               Ferrets accurately generalized pitch discriminations to untrained stimuli whenever temp
143 ce locations on a 4 x 4 raster array (50 mum pitch distance, ablation crater diameter of approximatel
144 d provide the rat with information about the pitch, distance, and yaw of a surface relative to its he
145 contact of each vibrissa and every possible (pitch, distance, and yaw) configuration of the head rela
146 y in confined spaces of 100 nm diameter with pitch down to 500 nm.
147 an enhance behavioral sensitivity to dynamic pitch, even in extreme cases of auditory degradation, bu
148 requency of a tone that matched the tinnitus pitch, f(T), with fixed ratios relative to f(T) and deli
149  a handle to systematically tune the helical pitch from 80 to 130 nm; and (ii) influences the size, s
150 as precluded the possibility of dissociating pitch from brightness.
151 d from a 5700 year-old piece of chewed birch pitch from Denmark.
152                The interaction of concurrent pitches gives rise to a sensation that can be characteri
153                                              Pitch governs our perception of musical melodies and har
154  defined patterns with a 200 nm (or smaller) pitch (>125,000 DPI), 30 nm (or larger) pixel size/linew
155                              The next topic, pitch, has been debated for millennia, but recent techni
156      Although cortical regions responsive to pitch have been identified, little is known about how pi
157 as independent auditory features of a sound, pitch height and timbral brightness can be confused for
158 he well-known crossmodal association between pitch height and value/brightness.
159 dimensions of musical pitch, pitch class and pitch height, are mapped to the hue-saturation plane and
160 ractions along both the long-pitch and short-pitch helices.
161 ividual monomers bound each other in a short-pitch helix complex in addition to other configurations,
162 coil polymerizes head to tail along the long-pitch helix of F-actin to form continuous superhelical c
163 hobic cavity between subunits along the long-pitch helix with only minor differences in conformation
164 to predict the processing time of concurrent pitches; here, consonant pitch combinations were decoded
165 s of tonal languages, however, processing of pitch (i.e., tone) changes that alter word meaning is le
166 the RNaseIII domain corresponds to the 21-nt pitch in the A-form duplex of a long dsRNA substrate, re
167 ch speakers respond rapidly to shifts of the pitch in their auditory feedback.
168                    In tonal languages, voice pitch inflections change the meaning of words, such that
169 rate can provide cochlear implant users with pitch information adequate for perceiving melodic inform
170                     The mosaicOne_B extracts pitch information in real-time and presents it via 12 mo
171 e been identified, little is known about how pitch information is extracted from the inner ear itself
172 leable, meaning that their encoding of voice pitch information might not receive as much neural speci
173  we take a new approach of providing missing pitch information through haptic stimulation on the fore
174                           One way to provide pitch information to cochlear implant users is through a
175 tom of assigning rhythmic functions to lower-pitch instruments may have emerged because of fundamenta
176                                              Pitch is a fundamental attribute of auditory perception.
177                                              Pitch is critical to speech understanding (particularly
178 s.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The question of how pitch is represented in the ear has been debated for ove
179 ility to unfamiliar sounds as their sense of pitch is severely degraded.
180 imately 15 nm-diameter nanoparticles, 100 nm pitch) is decorated by a model molecular system, consist
181             To investigate this possibility, pitch matching was conducted with 16 bilateral CI patien
182                A significant facilitation of pitch memory was revealed when anodal stimulation was ap
183                    No significant effects on pitch memory were found for anodal tDCS over the right S
184 ce of the left supramarginal gyrus (SMG) for pitch memory.
185 explore whether representations of a sound's pitch might derive from this need for compression, we co
186                                         This pitch mismatch may be related to degraded binaural abili
187                     The results suggest that pitch mismatches are prevalent with bilateral CI users.
188              The results also indicated that pitch mismatches persist even with extended bilateral CI
189 o corral prey [4,5] or to generate an upward pitching moment to counteract the torque caused by rapid
190                            Listeners extract pitch movements from speech and evaluate the shape of in
191  negative pressure due to both its shape and pitching movements.
192 tic afferent terminals is greatly reduced in pitch mutants.
193  backscattering effect by comparing variable-pitch nanomeshes.
194 anomesh geometrical features (pore diameter, pitch, neck) was achieved through the alumina template,
195 ies, while delivering a significantly higher pitch-normalized current density-above 0.9 milliampere p
196 ning of words, such that the brain processes pitch not merely as an acoustic characterization of soun
197                We find an average rotational pitch of 1.5mum, which is remarkably robust to changes i
198 regular array of 512 electrode-pixels with a pitch of 28 mum.
199            Ordered BCP line arrays with half-pitch of 6.4 nm are demonstrated on stripes >80 nm wide.
200 ibits an essentially temperature-independent pitch of 66 angstrom, significantly shorter than those r
201 cate that the single helices have a periodic pitch of approximately 100 nm and consist of oblong gold
202                        The perception of the pitch of harmonic complex sounds is a crucial function o
203 rrays with a periodicity that matches half a pitch of the cholesteric phase.
204 - or right-handed twist without changing the pitch of the formed helix.
205 w band gap can be controlled by the size and pitch of the quantum dots in the superlattice.
206 f an HCT are shifted by the same amount, the pitch of the resulting inharmonic tone (IHCT) can also s
207 ttice canvas of a thousand pixels each, with pitch of ~8 nm, on its inner and outer surfaces.
208 stance between neighboring electrodes (i.e., pitch) of 0.4 mm and 0.2/0.25 mm respectively.
209 ngth 1D surface relief gratings of different pitches on different facets of an inverse pyramidal arra
210 EG results show that dissonant dyads evoke a pitch onset response (POR) with a latency up to 36 ms lo
211 and judged which tone triplet had the higher pitch or brighter timbre.
212  whether two sequential tones share the same pitch or location depending on the block's instruction.
213 ctive combinations of azimuth and tilt, i.e. pitch or roll.
214 cal regions most responsive to variations in pitch or timbre at the univariate level of analysis were
215 uished based on whether subjects attended to pitch or timbre even when the stimuli remained physicall
216 ind that small manipulations altering either pitch or timbre independently can drive melody recogniti
217 ant attribute of timbre), with the degree of pitch or timbre variation in each sequence parametricall
218 wever, patterns of activation in response to pitch or timbre variations were discriminable in most su
219 n distinguishing between conditions in which pitch or timbre was discriminated.
220 ical regions responsive to changes in either pitch or timbre, but also reveal a population code that
221 rent brain regions preferentially coding for pitch or timbre, whereas other studies have suggested a
222  fundamental frequency (eliciting changes in pitch) or spectral centroid (eliciting changes in bright
223  one of three dimensions: auditory location, pitch, or visual brightness.
224 superoinferior direction and 7.21 degrees in pitch orientation.
225 anteroposterior direction and 2.6 degrees in pitch orientation.
226 ing simultaneously may differ in their voice pitch, perceiving the harmonic structure of sounds is ve
227                                      Musical pitch perception is argued to result from nonmusical bio
228                                              Pitch perception is critical for recognizing speech, mus
229 ssumption that poor high-frequency pure-tone pitch perception is the result of peripheral neural-codi
230 gest a candidate neural code underlying rate-pitch perception limitations often observed in CI users.
231 ort the view that cross-species variation in pitch perception reflects the constraints of estimating
232 y world, including auditory localization and pitch perception.
233 tations, with users having severely impaired pitch perception.
234 ganization of cortical regions implicated in pitch perception.
235 tion by AM rate was correlated with dominant pitch percepts in AMWN in many regions.
236 itous in speech and music and produce strong pitch percepts when they contain frequency components th
237 xamine the neural correlates of the abnormal pitch perturbation response in AD patients, using magnet
238 ust model of sensorimotor integration is the pitch perturbation response, in which speakers respond r
239 n abnormally enhanced behavioral response to pitch perturbation.
240 zed vowel sounds and received brief (200 ms) pitch perturbations at 100 Cents in their auditory feedb
241 s suggest that the two dimensions of musical pitch, pitch class and pitch height, are mapped to the h
242 c neuronal and synaptic parameters to assess pitch processing mechanisms at early stages of AC.
243  ERP study investigated whether the distinct pitch processing pattern for speech and nonspeech stimul
244 mechanisms that are responsible for (single) pitch processing.
245 amusia have a lifelong history of unreliable pitch processing.
246 age or tonal foreign language, which rely on pitch processing.
247                      However, an increase in pitch (produced by a change in fundamental frequency) ca
248     Melodic features included information on pitch progressions and their tempo, which were extracted
249 lar morphology with a characteristic feature pitch proportional to the input wavelength.
250 ation contours independent of each speaker's pitch range.
251 nd in barrel aged beer production: different pitching rates, high glucose concentration and presence
252 anguage-related regions and right hemisphere pitch-related regions, which reflected the between-group
253                                    We probed pitch representations in residents of the Bolivian Amazo
254 ulturally contingent, plausibly dependent on pitch representations that develop from experience with
255                      The ability to identify pitch-responsive regions in individual amusic subjects w
256 a stimulus contrast that reliably identifies pitch-responsive regions in normal individuals: harmonic
257 esses of 6 and 4 mm, arranged with a 1.27-mm pitch, resulting in a useable field of view 28 mm long a
258 alculation speeds for recognizing all of the pitches segmented from a single sample image.
259 results are consistent with the existence of pitch-sensitive neurons that rely only on place-based in
260 ation of a tonal language benefit in dynamic pitch sensitivity among NH children (using both a sweep
261   In contrast, when this response followed a pitch shift, its magnitude was significantly enhanced du
262 ally likely to report an upward or downward 'pitch' shift between tones.
263 rger vocal response magnitudes to unexpected pitch-shifts and significantly smaller vocal response ma
264                                        These pitch-shifts were either unexpected, providing informati
265 on abilities and vocal responses to auditory pitch-shifts.
266 aller vocal response magnitudes to sustained pitch-shifts.
267 er study in the context of a pre-hospital or pitch-side test to detect brain injury.
268                          Singers produce two pitches simultaneously: a booming low-frequency rumble a
269                        The interconnect half-pitch size will reach ~20 nm in the coming sub-5 nm tech
270 ersal speaking style distinguished by higher pitch, slower tempo, and exaggerated intonation, has bee
271 prospectively evaluated and underwent a high-pitch spiral acquisition CT scan.
272 semiconductor arrays exhibit smaller channel pitches than those created using existing lithographic m
273         Despite the perceptual importance of pitch, the neural mechanisms that underlie it remain poo
274                                              Pitch, the perceptual correlate of sound repetition rate
275 ture and material properties such as helical pitch, the twist elastic constant, and the interfacial t
276 istened to pairs of tone triplets varying in pitch, timbre, or both and judged which tone triplet had
277 l human languages regularly use intonational pitch to convey linguistic meaning, such as to emphasize
278 ll-documented capacity of dynamic changes in pitch to elicit impressions of motion along the vertical
279 be formed under the condition of a low teeth pitch to gap distance ratio.
280          Using these values we predict sound pitch to range from 350-800 Hz by VS modulation, corresp
281     Whenever a scene appeared, a high or low pitched tone was played, and participants counted (and l
282 where auditory neural activity encodes these pitch trajectories as their meaning is learned but not w
283                             Many species use pitch trajectories in their own vocalizations to disting
284 responses in particular to better respond to pitch trajectories that distinguish behaviorally relevan
285 s listener, as when dogs learn that distinct pitch trajectories whistled by their owner differentiate
286   We report the precise scaling of inter-CNT pitch using a supramolecular assembly method called spat
287 agonal network of triple helices that have a pitch variation consistent with the model 7/2 helix (3.5
288 ependent variation of its twist-bend helical pitch varying from 100 to 170 angstrom on heating, the t
289                 By adjusting the cholesteric pitch via quantitative water extraction, we achieve liqu
290 terned silk films with different topographic pitch via soft lithography and observed human corneal li
291 esolution alone may be sufficient to restore pitch via such implants.
292  noisy, low frequency cries to tonal, higher pitched vocalizations in adults, are caused partially by
293  and find that the individual who chewed the pitch was female and that she was genetically more close
294 tion was measured using sung speech in which pitch was held constant or varied across words, as well
295 terior HC and was only sensitive to vertical pitch, which could reflect the importance of the vertica
296 fforded by the CI limits perception of voice pitch, which is an important cue for speech prosody and
297 ned into nanohelices with a regular twisting pitch, while the other (C'EK(S)K(S)) remained as nanorib
298 w-frequency rumble alongside a hovering high-pitched whistle-like tone.
299 plore their visual environment with a series pitch, yaw and torsional (roll) rotations of their eyes,
300 g head movement to control flight direction (pitch, yaw, and roll axes).

 
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