Yale Cohen
Professor of Otorhinolaryngology
How is auditory information integrated with cognitive processes?
Professor Yale Cohen is an otorhinolaryngologist who studies auditory processing.
Some of the fundamental questions that Professor Cohen is interested in include:
- What is the neural and biological representation of hearing?
- How is auditory and visual information combined to form unified sensory percepts?
- How does the brain combine sensory, motor, and
cognitive cues to form internal computational models of the
external world?
Yale Cohen
Professor of Otorhinolaryngology
Selected Publications
Cohen, Y. E., Bennur, S., Christison-Lagay, K., Gifford, A. M., & Tsunada, J. (2016). Functional organization of the ventral auditory pathway. In Physiology, Psychoacoustics and Cognition in Normal and Impaired Hearing (pp. 381-388). Springer, Cham.
Liu, A. S., Tsunada, J., Gold, J. I., & Cohen, Y. E. (2015). Temporal integration of auditory information is invariant to temporal grouping cues. eneuro, ENEURO-0077.
Christison-Lagay, K. L., Gifford, A. M., & Cohen, Y. E. (2015). Neural correlates of auditory scene analysis and perception. International journal of psychophysiology, 95(2), 238-245.
Gifford, A. M., Cohen, Y. E., & Stocker, A. A. (2014). Characterizing the impact of category uncertainty on human auditory categorization behavior. PLoS computational biology, 10(7), e1003715.
Bizley, J. K., & Cohen, Y. E. (2013). The what, where and how of auditory-object perception. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 14(10), 693.