15 Papers
43 Citations
Dogu Erdener is an academic researcher from Middle East Technical University Northern Cyprus Campus. The author has contributed to research in topics: Speech perception & Motor theory of speech perception. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 15 publications. Previous affiliations of Dogu Erdener include University of Sydney & University of Western Sydney.
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Papers
Perception of the auditory-visual illusion in speech perception by children with phonological disorders
TL;DR: Findings suggest that phonological processing, rather than articulation, supports lip‐reading ability.
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The relationship between auditory–visual speech perception and language-specific speech perception at the onset of reading instruction in English-speaking children
Dogu Erdener,Denis K Burnham +1 more
TL;DR: Results showed that language-specific speech perception and lip-reading ability reliably predicted auditory-visual speech perception in children but that adult auditory- visual speech perception was predicted by auditory-only speech perception.
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Auditory-visual speech perception in three- and four-year-olds and its relationship to perceptual attunement and receptive vocabulary.
Dogu Erdener,Denis K Burnham +1 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that, in contrast to infants and schoolchildren, in three- to four-year-olds the relationship between speech perception and language ability is based on auditory and not visual or auditory–visual speech perception ability.
7
Second Language Instruction: Extrapolating From Auditory-Visual Speech Perception Research
Dogu Erdener
- 01 Jan 2020
TL;DR: This paper presented a general framework of evidence that visual speech information will facilitate L2 instruction and used this knowledge to cover the gap between psycholinguistics and L2 Instruction as an applied field.
5
The Development of Auditory-Visual Speech Perception across Languages and Age
Dogu Erdener,Kaoru Sekiyama,Denis K Burnham +2 more
- 01 Dec 2010
TL;DR: For instance, this article found that children with good auditory-visual speech perception tended to be those who focussed more on native than non-native speech sounds, while Japanese adults use less visual information than do their English-language counterparts.