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Benjamin Munson (professor)

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Benjamin Munson is a professor of Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences University of Minnesota. His research relates to relationships among speech perception, speech production, and vocabulary growth in children.[1] The bulk of his research has examined how speech perception, production, and word knowledge interact during development in typically developing children, in children with Speech Sound Disorder, in children with Developmental Language Disorder, in adult second-language learners, and in adults with age-related hearing impairment. He has also studied how people convey and perceive sexuality through phonetic variation.

In research presented at the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2018, he revealed that the voices of boys and girls were identifiably different even before puberty with the boys' voices being lower and boys that were gender dysphoric showing traits more associated with women.[2][3][4]

Munson received his BA in Russian and Political Science from State University of New York at Buffalo (1992), his MA in speech-language pathology from Ohio State University (1997) and his PhD in speech and hearing science also from Ohio State.

References

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  1. ^ "Dr. Ben Munson". 26 April 2017.
  2. ^ Whipple, Tom (17 February 2018). "Lower your voice! Boys change their tone even before puberty" – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
  3. ^ Taylor, Jeff (22 December 2017). "What makes some men sound gay but not others?".
  4. ^ "Brooklyn director asks 'Do I Sound Gay?' in new documentary". 11 May 2014.
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