Literature DB >> 9504270

Recognizing spoken words: the neighborhood activation model.

P A Luce1, D B Pisoni.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: A fundamental problem in the study of human spoken word recognition concerns the structural relations among the sound patterns of words in memory and the effects these relations have on spoken word recognition. In the present investigation, computational and experimental methods were employed to address a number of fundamental issues related to the representation and structural organization of spoken words in the mental lexicon and to lay the groundwork for a model of spoken word recognition.
DESIGN: Using a computerized lexicon consisting of transcriptions of 20,000 words, similarity neighborhoods for each of the transcriptions were computed. Among the variables of interest in the computation of the similarity neighborhoods were: 1) the number of words occurring in a neighborhood, 2) the degree of phonetic similarity among the words, and 3) the frequencies of occurrence of the words in the language. The effects of these variables on auditory word recognition were examined in a series of behavioral experiments employing three experimental paradigms: perceptual identification of words in noise, auditory lexical decision, and auditory word naming.
RESULTS: The results of each of these experiments demonstrated that the number and nature of words in a similarity neighborhood affect the speed and accuracy of word recognition. A neighborhood probability rule was developed that adequately predicted identification performance. This rule, based on Luce's (1959) choice rule, combines stimulus word intelligibility, neighborhood confusability, and frequency into a single expression. Based on this rule, a model of auditory word recognition, the neighborhood activation model, was proposed. This model describes the effects of similarity neighborhood structure on the process of discriminating among the acoustic-phonetic representations of words in memory. The results of these experiments have important implications for current conceptions of auditory word recognition in normal and hearing impaired populations of children and adults.

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Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9504270      PMCID: PMC3467695          DOI: 10.1097/00003446-199802000-00001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ear Hear        ISSN: 0196-0202            Impact factor:   3.570


  35 in total

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Authors:  J Charles-Luce; P A Luce
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Authors:  W D Marslen-Wilson
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10.  Consonant confusions in noise: a study of perceptual features.

Authors:  M D Wang; R C Bilger
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  411 in total

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7.  Use of audiovisual information in speech perception by prelingually deaf children with cochlear implants: a first report.

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8.  Influence of onset density on spoken-word recognition.

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9.  Assessing spoken word recognition in children who are deaf or hard of hearing: a translational approach.

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