Faculty/Staff/PhD
Academic Faculty
Lee, Jungmee, Ph.D.
Audiology Program Director
Assistant Professor of Instruction
Phone: 813.974.4630
Office: PCD 4021C
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View Curriculum Vitae
Jungmee Lee got her BA in Psychology from Seoul National University, South Korea and
a Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from University of Florida (advisor: David M. Green).
She did her postdoctoral trainings with Sid. P Bacon at the Arizona State University
and Glenis Long at the graduate center of the City University of New York. Prior to
joining USF, she worked as an instructor and senior scientist at University of Wisconsin-Madison,
worked as a hearing scientist and project manager for Hearing Assessment Reformation
Project (HARP) at Northwestern University, and was a faculty at University of Arizona.
Her major training is in experimental psychology, specializing in auditory perception
(psychoacoustics). The research focus has been on perception mechanisms of time-varying
signals like speech and music (auditory temporal processing) in both normal and impaired
hearing system. Recently her research has been expanded to combine knowledge of physiological
measure (i.e., otoacoustic emissions) and psychoacoustics to better understand the
auditory system. She used to teach Suzuki Piano while she was on motherhood leave.
Another passion other than hearing science and piano is photography.
Post Doctoral Fellowship | Graduate Center at CUNY | 2002-2003 |
Post Doctoral Fellowship | Arizona State University | 1994-1995 |
Ph.D in Experimental Psychology | University of Florida | 1994 |
B.A in Psychology | Seoul National University | 1988 |
Teaching
- SPA 5132 | Audiology Instrumentation
- SPA 5120 | Psychoacoustics
- SPA 7497.001 | Proseminar in Communication Sciences and Disorders
Recent Scholarly Activity
- Robert A Lutfi, Briana Rodriguez, Jungmee Lee, Torben Pastore (in review). “A test of model classes accounting for individual differences in simulated cocktail-party listening" J. Acoust. Soc. Am.
- Robert A Lutfi, Briana Rodriguez, Jungmee Lee (2021). “The listener effect in multi-talker speech segregation " Trends in hearing. 25, 1-11.
- Jungmee Lee and Robert A Lutfi (2020). “Evidence of possible contribution of cochlear mechanics to individual differences in cocktail-party listening from studies of otoacoustic emission,” Forum Acusticum, Dec 2020, Lyon France. pp. 1413-1416. https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03235935/,
- Robert A Lutfi, Briana Rodriguez, Jungmee Lee, Torben Pastore (2020). “A test of model classes accounting for individual differences
in simulated cocktail-party listening" J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 148, 4014-4024. PMID: 33379927; PMCID: PMC7775115.
- Briana Rodriguez, B., Jungmee Lee,and Robert A. Lutfi (2020). “Additivity of segregation cues in simulated cocktail-party listening,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 149, 82-86. PMID: 33514184; PMCID: PMC7787694.
- Briana Rodriguez, B., Jungmee Lee,and Robert A. Lutfi (2019). “Synergy of Spectral and Spatial Segregation Cues in Simulated Cocktail Party Listening”, Proc. Mtgs. Acoust. 36, 050005;
- Robert Lutfi., Alison Tan, and Jungmee Lee. (2018). “Modeling individual differences in cocktail-party listening”, Acta Acustica united with Acustica, 104, 787-791
- Monica Wagner, Jungmee Lee, Francesca Mingino, Colleen O’Brien, Valerie Shafer, Mitchell Steinschneider (2017). “Language experience with a native-language phoneme sequence modulates the effects of attention on cortical sensory processing,” Frontiers in Neuroscience. 11:569
- Robert Lutfi, Alison Tan, and Jungmee Lee. (2017). “Individual differences in cocktail party listening: The relative role of decision weights and internal,” Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Proceed. Meetings on Acoustics, 30(1), 1-7.
- An-Chieh Chang, Robert Lutfi, Jungmee Lee, and Inseok Heo (2016). “,” Trends in hearing, Vol 20, 1-9.
- An-Chieh Chang, Jungmee Lee, Robert Lutfi (2015). “Auditory streaming of tones of uncertain frequency, level and duration,” J. Acoust. Soc. Am.Express Letter,