Literature DB >> 6447767

Information in speech: observations on the perception of [s]-stop clusters.

P J Bailey, Q Summerfield.   

Abstract

A series of experiments is reported that investigated the pattern of acoustic information specifying place and manner of stop consonants in medial position after [s]. In both production and perception, information for stop place includes the spectrum of the fricative at offset, the duration of the silent closure interval, the spectral relationship between the frequency of the stop release burst and the following periodically excited formants, and the spectral and temporal characteristics of the first formant transition. Similarly, the information for stop manner includes the duration of silent closure, the frequency of the first formant at the release, the magnitude of the first formant transition, and the proximity of the second and third formants at release. A relationship was shown to exist in perception between the spectral characteristics of the first formant and the duration of the silent closure required to hear a stop. This appears to reciprocate the covariation of these parameters in production across different places of articulation and different vocalic contexts. The existence of perceptual sensitivity to a wide range of the acoustic consequences of production questions the efficacy of accounts of speech perception in terms of the fractionation of the signal into elemental acoustic cues, which are then integrated to yield a phonetic percept. It is argued that it is inappropriate to ascribe a psychological status to cues whose only reality is their operational role as physical parameters whose manipulation can change the phenotic interpretation of a signal. It is suggested that the metric of the information for phonetic perception cannot be that of the cues; rather, a metric should be sought in which acoustic and articulatory dynamics are isomorphic.

Mesh:

Year:  1980        PMID: 6447767     DOI: 10.1037//0096-1523.6.3.536

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform        ISSN: 0096-1523            Impact factor:   3.332


  14 in total

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5.  Two strategies in fricative discrimination.

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6.  Duplex perception of cues for stop consonants: evidence for a phonetic mode.

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Journal:  Percept Psychophys       Date:  1981-08

7.  Perceptual equivalence of acoustic cues in speech and nonspeech perception.

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9.  Acoustic Cue Weighting by Adults with Cochlear Implants: A Mismatch Negativity Study.

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10.  Neurophysiology of spectrotemporal cue organization of spoken language in auditory memory.

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