Sandra Trehub

Sandra Trehub

University of Toronto

H-index: 88

North America-Canada

About Sandra Trehub

Sandra Trehub, With an exceptional h-index of 88 and a recent h-index of 42 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Toronto, specializes in the field of music perception, maternal singing, speech perception, cochlear implants, child development.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Detection of pitch errors in well-known songs

Acoustic regularities in infant-directed speech and song across cultures

Musical care in infancy

Sampling criteria and recording quality influence relaxation responses to lullabies

Enhanced memory for vocal melodies in autism spectrum disorder and Williams syndrome

Challenging infant-directed singing as a credible signal of maternal attention

Divergent Perspectives on Musical Knowledge, Expertise, and Science

Acoustic regularities in infant-directed vocalizations across cultures

Sandra Trehub Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

22688

Citations(since 2020)

5807

Cited By

19375

hIndex(all)

88

hIndex(since 2020)

42

i10Index(all)

197

i10Index(since 2020)

125

Email

University Profile Page

University of Toronto

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Sandra Trehub Skills & Research Interests

music perception

maternal singing

speech perception

cochlear implants

child development

Top articles of Sandra Trehub

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Detection of pitch errors in well-known songs

Psychology of Music

Michael W Weiss

Sandra E Trehub

2023/1

Acoustic regularities in infant-directed speech and song across cultures

Nature Human Behaviour

Courtney B Hilton

Cody J Moser

Mila Bertolo

Harry Lee-Rubin

Dorsa Amir

...

2022/11

Musical care in infancy

Collaborative Insights: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Musical Care Throughout the Life Course

Katie Rose M Sanfilippo

Shannon de l’Etoile

Sandra E Trehub

2022/6/10

Sampling criteria and recording quality influence relaxation responses to lullabies

Patrick E Savage

Yuto Ozaki

Sandra E Trehub

2021/8/9

Enhanced memory for vocal melodies in autism spectrum disorder and Williams syndrome

Autism Research

Michael W Weiss

Megha Sharda

Miriam Lense

Krista L Hyde

Sandra E Trehub

2021

Challenging infant-directed singing as a credible signal of maternal attention

Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Sandra E Trehub

2021

Divergent Perspectives on Musical Knowledge, Expertise, and Science

Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture

Sandra E Trehub

2020/12/1

Acoustic regularities in infant-directed vocalizations across cultures

Cody J Moser

Harry Lee-Rubin

Constance M Bainbridge

S Atwood

Jan Simson

...

2020/4/11

HIIT the road Jack: An exploratory study on the effects of an acute bout of cardiovascular high-intensity interval training on piano learning

Frontiers in psychology

Dana Swarbrick

Alex Kiss

Sandra Trehub

Luc Tremblay

David Alter

...

2020/9/10

Development of consonance preferences in Western listeners.

Journal of Experimental Psychology: General

Michael W Weiss

Laura K Cirelli

Josh H McDermott

Sandra E Trehub

2020/4

Effects of maternal singing style on mother–infant arousal and behavior

Journal of cognitive neuroscience

Laura K Cirelli

Zuzanna B Jurewicz

Sandra E Trehub

2020/7/1

Cross-cultural work in music cognition: Challenges, insights, and recommendations

Music Perception

Nori Jacoby

Elizabeth Hellmuth Margulis

Martin Clayton

Erin Hannon

Henkjan Honing

...

2020/2/1

Infant-directed singing from a dynamic multimodal perspective: Evolutionary origins, cross-cultural variation, and relation to infant-directed speech

Sandra E Trehub

Frank A Russo

2020/5/19

Infants’ perception of auditory patterns.

Laura K Cirelli

Sandra E Trehub

2020

Familiar songs reduce infant distress.

Developmental psychology

Laura K Cirelli

Sandra E Trehub

2020/5

Perception: Music

Sandra E Trehub

2020/1/1

See List of Professors in Sandra Trehub University(University of Toronto)