Jeremy Marozeau
BSc (EPFL), PhD (Paris VI)
Research Fellow, Bionics Institute
P: +61 3 9667 7544
F: +61 3 9667 7518
E: jmarozeau@bionicsinstitute.org
Dr Jeremy Marozeau is a Research Fellow at the Bionics Institute. His research is focusing on the perception of music and voice pitch information for people with a cochlear implant.
He received his doctorate from the University of Paris-VI. His dissertation was on the effect of the fundamental frequency on timbre. He did his PhD as part of the Perception and Musical Cognition team at the Institute for Music/Acoustic Research and Coordination (IRCAM, Paris) and as an invited researcher at the Center for New Music and Audio Technologies (CNMAT) of U.C. Berkeley.
After working at the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS, Marseille) on modelling the loudness of impulsive sounds, he continued his research on loudness in hearing-impaired listeners as Research Associate at Northeastern University with Dr Mary Florentine.
Research Projects
Publications
Epstein, M., Marozeau, J., & Cleveland, S. (2010). Listening habits of iPod users. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 53(6), 1472-1477.
Kong, Y. Y., Mullangi, A., Marozeau, J., & Epstein, M. (in press). Temporal and spectral cues for musical timbre perception in electric hearing. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research. PDF of article
Marozeau, J., Innes-Brown, H., Grayden, D. B., Burkitt, A. N., & Blamey, P. (2010). The effect of visual cues on auditory stream segregation in musicians and non-musicians. PLoS ONE, 5(6), e11297. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0011297 Full text article
Marozeau, J. and Florentine, M. (2009). Testing the binaural equal-loudness-ratio hypothesis with hearing-impaired listeners, J Acoust Soc Am., 126(1), 310–317. PDF of article
Marozeau, J. and Epstein, M. (2008). Induced loudness reduction as function of frequency difference between test tone and inducer, Perception and Psychophysics, 70(4), 725-731. PDF of article
Marozeau, J. and Florentine, M. (2007). Loudness growth in individual listeners with hearing losses: A review, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 122, EL81-87.
Marozeau, J., and De Cheveigne, A. (2007). The effect of fundamental frequency on the brightness dimension of timbre, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 121, 383-387. PDF of article
Marozeau, J., Epstein, M., Florentine, M., and Daley, B. (2006). A test of the binaural equal-loudness-ratio hypothesis for tones, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 120, 3870-3877.
PDF of article
Whilby, S, Florentine, M, Wagner, E, and Marozeau, J (2006) Monaural and binaural loudness of 5- and 200-ms tones in normal and impaired hearing, J Acoust Soc Am 119, 3931-3939. PDF of article
Bigand, E., Vieillard, S., Madurell, F., Marozeau, J., and Dacquet, A. (2005). Multidimensional scaling of emotional responses to music: The effect of musical expertise and of the duration of the excerpts, Cognition & Emotion 19, 1113-1139. PDF of article
See more publications by Jeremy Marozeau in PubMed.
Link to the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (JASA).
Link to the Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research.
Additional information
Conference presentations
Innes-Brown, H., Marozeau, J., Storey C.& Blamey. P. (2010). Improving music perception outcomes for children with hearing impairments: A baseline longitudinal study, Frontiers 2010, July 28-30, Melbourne, Australia.
PDF of poster
Marozeau, J., Innes-Brown, H., & Blamey, P. (2010). Comparisons between perceptual cues for auditory streaming, Frontiers 2010, July 28-30, Melbourne, Australia.
Innes-Brown, H., Marozeau, J., Grayden, D. B., Burkitt, A. N., and Blamey, P. (2009). Visual information can improve musical stream segregation, Paper presented at the 2nd International Conference on Music Communication Science (ICoMCS2), 3-4 December, Sydney, Australia.
Marozeau, J., Innes-Brown, H., Grayden, D. B., Burkitt, A. N., and Blamey, P. (2009). The effect of temporal envelope on melody segregation, Paper presented at the 2nd International Conference on Music Communication Science (ICoMCS2), 3-4 December, Sydney, Australia.