Do you want me to refer to your website? (Al Bregman )


Subject: Do you want me to refer to your website?
From:    Al Bregman  <al.bregman@xxxxxxxx>
Date:    Tue, 8 Jun 2010 02:49:34 -0500
List-Archive:<http://lists.mcgill.ca/scripts/wa.exe?LIST=AUDITORY>

Dear all, I'm in the process of working on my website, part of which presents a quick overview of auditory scene analysis (ASA). The URL is http://webpages.mcgill.ca/staff/Group2/abregm1/web/ One of the sections is presently called "Useful links" (I may rename it). Originally I had intended to insert the URLs of the websites of other people working on ASA. However, I realized that such links are transient, as people relocate or rename their web pages, and that a lot of work would be involved in keeping the links up to date. So I thought I would let Google do the work. My plan is to give the visitor a list of Google-type Boolean search expressions instead of URLs. Each one will be followed by a set of brief descriptive phrases that will tell what sort of work the researcher does. I will try to group them in some sensible way. Below, I have given some examples that I have tested out, with the search expressions enclosed by angle brackets. They should be able to find the researchers even if they change institutions. If you are doing ASA-related research and would like your website to be "linked" in this way, please send me a Google search expression that you believe will always find your current website, followed by a list of short phrases that describe your work, in the format shown in the examples below. Please put your name -- as it appears on your website -- as the first part of the search expression. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- TESTED EXAMPLES <Christopher Darwin speech perception> perceptual organization, speech sounds, psychology of speech perception <David Huron music cognition> music perception and cognition, music and emotion, computer-based analysis of principles of music composition. <Valter Ciocca language perception> auditory scene analysis, speech perception and production, pitch perception and production, Cantonese lexical tone, auditory continuity. . <Albert Feng neurophysiology> neural basis of sound communication, extraction of signals in complex auditory scenes, frog and bat auditory systems, sensory neuroscience <Yonatan Fishman neurophysiology> behavioral neurophysiology, pitch perception and auditory scene analysis in primate auditory cortex, <Guy J. Brown computational auditory scene analysis research interest> automatic speech recognition, separation of speech from background sounds, speech intelligibility in noise <Elyse Sussman cognitive neuroscience> human brain activity (mismatch negativity), perceptual organization of sound, auditory scene analysis --------------------------------------------------------------------- Thanks, and best wishes to all, Al ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Albert S. Bregman, Emeritus Professor Psychology Department, McGill University 1205 Doctor Penfield Avenue Montreal, QC, Canada H3A 1B1. Office: Phone: (514) 398-6103, Fax: (514) 398-4896 http://webpages.mcgill.ca/staff/Group2/abregm1/web/ -----------------------------------------------------------------------------


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