Literature DB >> 9503910

On the relevance of locus equations for production and perception of stop consonants.

L Brancazio1, C A Fowler.   

Abstract

We examined the possible relevance of locus equations to human production and perception of stop consonants. The orderly output constraint (OOC) of Sussman, Fruchter, and Cable (1995) claims that humans have evolved to produce speech such that F2 at consonant release and F2 at vowel midpoint are linearly related for consonants so that developing perceptual systems can form representations in an F2ons-by-F2vowel space. The theory claims that this relationship described by locus equations can distinguish consonants, and that the linearity of locus equations is captured in neural representations and is thus perceptually relevant. We investigated these claims by testing how closely locus equations reflect the production and perception of stop consonants. In Experiment 1, we induced speakers to change their locus equation slope and intercept parameters systematically, but found that consonants remained distinctive in slope-by-intercept space. In Experiment 2, we presented stop-consonant syllables with their bursts removed to listeners, and compared their classification error matrices with the predictions of a model using locus equation prototypes and with those of an exemplar-based model that uses F2ons and F2vowel, but not locus equations. Both models failed to account for a large proportion of the variance in listeners' responses; the locus equation model was no better in its predictions than the exemplar model. These findings are discussed in the context of the OOC.

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Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9503910     DOI: 10.3758/bf03211916

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Percept Psychophys        ISSN: 0031-5117


  4 in total

1.  Interarticulator phasing, locus equations, and degree of coarticulation.

Authors:  A Löfqvist
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  1999-10       Impact factor: 1.840

2.  Locus equations are an acoustic expression of articulator synergy.

Authors:  Khalil Iskarous; Carol A Fowler; D H Whalen
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2010-10       Impact factor: 1.840

3.  The coarticulation/invariance scale: mutual information as a measure of coarticulation resistance, motor synergy, and articulatory invariance.

Authors:  Khalil Iskarous; Christine Mooshammer; Phil Hoole; Daniel Recasens; Christine H Shadle; Elliot Saltzman; D H Whalen
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2013-08       Impact factor: 1.840

4.  Overreliance on auditory feedback may lead to sound/syllable repetitions: simulations of stuttering and fluency-inducing conditions with a neural model of speech production.

Authors:  Oren Civier; Stephen M Tasko; Frank H Guenther
Journal:  J Fluency Disord       Date:  2010-05-20       Impact factor: 2.538

  4 in total

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