Literature DB >> 17664424

Unsupervised learning of vowel categories from infant-directed speech.

Gautam K Vallabha1, James L McClelland, Ferran Pons, Janet F Werker, Shigeaki Amano.   

Abstract

Infants rapidly learn the sound categories of their native language, even though they do not receive explicit or focused training. Recent research suggests that this learning is due to infants' sensitivity to the distribution of speech sounds and that infant-directed speech contains the distributional information needed to form native-language vowel categories. An algorithm, based on Expectation-Maximization, is presented here for learning the categories from a sequence of vowel tokens without (i) receiving any category information with each vowel token, (ii) knowing in advance the number of categories to learn, or (iii) having access to the entire data ensemble. When exposed to vowel tokens drawn from either English or Japanese infant-directed speech, the algorithm successfully discovered the language-specific vowel categories (/I, i, epsilon, e/ for English, /I, i, e, e/ for Japanese). A nonparametric version of the algorithm, closely related to neural network models based on topographic representation and competitive Hebbian learning, also was able to discover the vowel categories, albeit somewhat less reliably. These results reinforce the proposal that native-language speech categories are acquired through distributional learning and that such learning may be instantiated in a biologically plausible manner.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17664424      PMCID: PMC1934922          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0705369104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  29 in total

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Authors:  J E Andruski; T M Nearey
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5.  Response distributions in intensity resolution and speech discrimination.

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7.  Infant sensitivity to distributional information can affect phonetic discrimination.

Authors:  Jessica Maye; Janet F Werker; LouAnn Gerken
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8.  Spectral-shape features versus formants as acoustic correlates for vowels.

Authors:  S A Zahorian; A J Jagharghi
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9.  Training Japanese listeners to identify English /r/ and /l/. II: The role of phonetic environment and talker variability in learning new perceptual categories.

Authors:  S E Lively; J S Logan; D B Pisoni
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10.  Developmental changes in perception of nonnative vowel contrasts.

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  48 in total

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8.  Dimension-based statistical learning of vowels.

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9.  Individual differences in online spoken word recognition: Implications for SLI.

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10.  The influence of categories on perception: explaining the perceptual magnet effect as optimal statistical inference.

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