Literature DB >> 521551

Speech perception in early infancy: perceptual constancy for spectrally dissimilar vowel categories.

P K Kuhl.   

Abstract

While numerous studies on infant perception demonstrate the infant's ability to discriminate individual speech-sound pairs, very few demonstrate the infant's ability to recognize the similarity among phonetic units when they occur in different phonetic contexts, in different positions in a syllable, or when they are spoken by different talkers. In two studies, six-month-old infants demonstrated the ability to distinguish two spectrally dissimilar vowel categories (/a/ and /i/) in which the vowel tokens were generated to simulate tokens produced by a male, a female, and a child talker. In experiment I, the infants were initially trained to discriminate the /a/ and /i/ tokens produced by the computer-simulated male voice. They were then gradually exposed to a number of novel tokens in a progressive transfer-of-learning task. In experiment II, the infants were initially trained to discriminate the same vowell contrast, but were then immediately tested with all of the tokens in both vowel categories. In both experiments the infants demonstrated rapid transfer of learning from the training tokens produced by the male talker to the tokens produced by female and child talkers. Both experiments provide strong evidence that the six-month-old infant recognizes acoustic categories that conform to the vowel categories perceived by adult speakers of English.

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Year:  1979        PMID: 521551     DOI: 10.1121/1.383639

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am        ISSN: 0001-4966            Impact factor:   1.840


  48 in total

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2.  Young infants' perception of liquid coarticulatory influences on following stop consonants.

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Journal:  Percept Psychophys       Date:  1990-12

3.  INFANTS' RECOGNITION OF THE SOUND PATTERNS OF THEIR OWN NAMES.

Authors:  Denise R Mandel; Peter W Jusczyk; David B Pisoni
Journal:  Psychol Sci       Date:  1995-09

4.  Some consequences of stimulus variability on speech processing by 2-month-old infants.

Authors:  P W Jusczyk; D B Pisoni; J Mullennix
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  1992-06

5.  Integrating speech information across talkers, gender, and sensory modality: female faces and male voices in the McGurk effect.

Authors:  K P Green; P K Kuhl; A N Meltzoff; E B Stevens
Journal:  Percept Psychophys       Date:  1991-12

Review 6.  Uses and interpretations of non-word repetition tasks in children with and without specific language impairments (SLI).

Authors:  Jeffry A Coady; Julia L Evans
Journal:  Int J Lang Commun Disord       Date:  2008 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 3.020

7.  A role for the developing lexicon in phonetic category acquisition.

Authors:  Naomi H Feldman; Thomas L Griffiths; Sharon Goldwater; James L Morgan
Journal:  Psychol Rev       Date:  2013-10       Impact factor: 8.934

8.  Vowel discrimination by hearing infants as a function of number of spectral channels.

Authors:  Andrea D Warner-Czyz; Derek M Houston; Linda S Hynan
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2014-05       Impact factor: 1.840

9.  Pitch characteristics of infant-directed speech affect infants' ability to discriminate vowels.

Authors:  Laurel J Trainor; Renée N Desjardins
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2002-06

10.  Auditory development in early amplified children: factors influencing auditory-based communication outcomes in children with hearing loss.

Authors:  Yvonne S Sininger; Alison Grimes; Elizabeth Christensen
Journal:  Ear Hear       Date:  2010-04       Impact factor: 3.570

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