jensenkk.net
Dr. Kenneth Kragh Jensen - Research
http://www.jensenkk.net/CV.htm
Kenneth K. Jensen, Ph.D. Download CV as pdf. Audiology and Speech Center, America Building. Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. Bethesda, MD 20889. E-mail: kenneth.k.jensen.ctr@us.army.mil. 11401 July Drive, Apt. 301. Silver Spring, MD 20904. Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. Bethesda, MD /. Before August 2011: Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC). Neuroscience of Vocal Communication, Post Doc. March 2007 October 2010. Neuroscience of Vocal Communication, Ph.D. Light-dep...
jensenkk.net
Dr. Kenneth Kragh Jensen - Links
http://www.jensenkk.net/Links.htm
Personal relations and research interest. Physical acoustics and outdoor sound propagation). Information transfer in constraining environments, social behavior and acoustic communication, sexual selection by acoustic communication, neuroethology of bird song, sound analysis and synthesis methods, and applied bioacoustics). Hearing and ABR studies on birds and other vertebrates). Hearing and sound communication in frogs with studies of the associated behavior, biophysics and neurophysiology). Research on ...
jensenkk.net
Dr. Kenneth Kragh Jensen
http://www.jensenkk.net/Index.htm
Kenneth Kragh Jensen, PhD. In broad terms my research interests cover neuroscience. I'm interested in theoretical and modeling as well as experimental approaches. In Bethesda, MD. The work includes psychoacoustic testing of human subjects and computational modeling of speech intelligibility in noisy conditions. I also have an interest in animal orientation and navigation and published a theoretical paper on a computational model on orientation cue integration.
jensenkk.net
Dr. Kenneth Kragh Jensen - Publications
http://www.jensenkk.net/publications.htm
Jensen, K. K. Klokker, S. (2006). Hearing sensitivity and critical ratios of hooded crows ( Corvus corone cornix. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 2) 1269 - 1276. Jensen, K. K. Co-modulation detection differences in the hooded crow (Corvus corone cornix), with direct comparison to human subjects. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. Jensen, K. K. Cooper, B. G., Larsen, O. N., and Goller, F. Songbirds use pulse tone register in two voices to generate low-frequency sound. 1) 507 - 518.