EFFECTS OF SENTENCE CONTEXT ON PHONEMIC CATEGORIZATION OF NATURAL AND SYNTHETIC CONSONANT-VOWEL TOKENS

被引:1
作者
Hedrick, Mark S. [1 ]
Lee, Ji Young [1 ]
Harkrider, Ashley [1 ]
Von Hapsburg, Deborah [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Tennessee, Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Audiol & Speech Pathol, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA
关键词
AUDITORY WORD RECOGNITION; SPEECH-PERCEPTION; INTERACTIVE PROCESSES; LEXICAL INFORMATION; TRACE MODEL; IDENTIFICATION; COARTICULATION; COMPENSATION; RESTORATION; CONSTRAINTS;
D O I
10.2466/24.22.PMS.118k14w6
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The purpose was to assess if phonemic categorization in sentential context is best explained by autonomous feedforward processing or by top-down feedback processing that affects phonemic representation. 11 listeners with normal hearing, ages 20-50 years, were asked to label consonants in /pi/ - /ti/ consonant-vowel (CV) stimuli in 9-step continua. One continuum was derived from natural tokens and the other was synthetically generated. The CV stimuli were presented in isolation and in three sentential contexts: a neutral context, a context favoring /p/, and a context favoring /t/. For both natural and synthetic stimuli, the isolated and neutral context sentences yielded significantly more /t/ responses than sentence contexts primed for either /p/ or /t/. No other conditions were significantly different. Results did not show easily explainable semantic context effects. Instead, data clustering was more readily explained by top-down feedback processing affecting phonemic representation.
引用
收藏
页码:210 / 224
页数:15
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]  
American National Standards Institute, 2010, S36 ANSI
[2]   How to milk a coat: The effects of semantic and acoustic information on phoneme categorization [J].
Borsky, S ;
Tuller, B ;
Shapiro, LP .
JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1998, 103 (05) :2670-2676
[3]   CONSTRAINTS ON INTERACTIVE PROCESSES IN AUDITORY WORD RECOGNITION - THE ROLE OF SENTENCE CONTEXT [J].
CONNINE, CM .
JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE, 1987, 26 (05) :527-538
[4]   INTERACTIVE USE OF LEXICAL INFORMATION IN SPEECH-PERCEPTION [J].
CONNINE, CM ;
CLIFTON, C .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 1987, 13 (02) :291-299
[5]   EFFECTS OF SUBSEQUENT SENTENCE CONTEXT IN AUDITORY WORD RECOGNITION - TEMPORAL AND LINGUISTIC CONSTRAINTS [J].
CONNINE, CM ;
BLASKO, DG ;
HALL, M .
JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE, 1991, 30 (02) :234-250
[6]   PHONEME IDENTIFICATION AND THE LEXICON [J].
CUTLER, A ;
MEHLER, J ;
NORRIS, D ;
SEGUI, J .
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 1987, 19 (02) :141-177
[7]   Investigating the Time Course of Spoken Word Recognition: Electrophysiological Evidence for the Influences of Phonological Similarity [J].
Desroches, Amy S. ;
Newman, Randy Lynn ;
Joanisse, Marc F. .
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2009, 21 (10) :1893-1906
[8]  
ELLMAN J. L., 1988, J MEM LANG, V27, P143
[9]   PHONETIC CATEGORIZATION IN AUDITORY WORD PERCEPTION [J].
GANONG, WF .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 1980, 6 (01) :110-125
[10]   Perceptual weighting of stop consonant cues by normal and impaired listeners in reverberation versus noise [J].
Hedrick, Mark S. ;
Younger, Mary Sue .
JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH, 2007, 50 (02) :254-269