Literature DB >> 24511179

Immediate effects of anticipatory coarticulation in spoken-word recognition.

Anne Pier Salverda1, Dave Kleinschmidt1, Michael K Tanenhaus1.   

Abstract

Two visual-world experiments examined listeners' use of pre word-onset anticipatory coarticulation in spoken-word recognition. Experiment 1 established the shortest lag with which information in the speech signal influences eye-movement control, using stimuli such as "The … ladder is the target". With a neutral token of the definite article preceding the target word, saccades to the referent were not more likely than saccades to an unrelated distractor until 200-240 ms after the onset of the target word. In Experiment 2, utterances contained definite articles which contained natural anticipatory coarticulation pertaining to the onset of the target word (" The ladder … is the target"). A simple Gaussian classifier was able to predict the initial sound of the upcoming target word from formant information from the first few pitch periods of the article's vowel. With these stimuli, effects of speech on eye-movement control began about 70 ms earlier than in Experiment 1, suggesting rapid use of anticipatory coarticulation. The results are interpreted as support for "data explanation" approaches to spoken-word recognition. Methodological implications for visual-world studies are also discussed.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Coarticulation; Speech perception; Spoken-word recognition; Visual-world paradigm

Year:  2014        PMID: 24511179      PMCID: PMC3914676          DOI: 10.1016/j.jml.2013.11.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mem Lang        ISSN: 0749-596X            Impact factor:   3.059


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