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      Perceptual learning in speech: Stability over time

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      The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
      Acoustical Society of America (ASA)

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          Abstract

          Perceptual representations of phonemes are flexible and adapt rapidly to accommodate idiosyncratic articulation in the speech of a particular talker. This letter addresses whether such adjustments remain stable over time and under exposure to other talkers. During exposure to a story, listeners learned to interpret an ambiguous sound as [f] or [s]. Perceptual adjustments measured after 12 h were as robust as those measured immediately after learning. Equivalent effects were found when listeners heard speech from other talkers in the 12 h interval, and when they had the opportunity to consolidate learning during sleep.

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          The influence of the lexicon on phonetic categorization: stimulus quality in word-final ambiguity.

          The categorization of word-final phonemes provides a test to distinguish between an interactive and an autonomous model of speech recognition. Word-final lexical effects ought to be stronger than word-initial lexical effects, and the models make different reaction time (RT) predictions only for word-final decisions. A first experiment found no lexical shifts between the categorization functions of word-final fricatives in pairs such as fish-fiss and kish-kiss. In a second experiment, with stimuli degraded by low-pass filtering, reliable lexical shifts did emerge. Both models need revision to account for this stimulus-quality effect. Stimulus quality rather than stimulus ambiguity per se determines the extent of lexical involvement in phonetic categorization. Furthermore, the lexical shifts were limited to fast RT ranges, contrary to the interactive model's predictions. These data therefore favor an autonomous bottom-up model of speech recognition.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
            The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
            Acoustical Society of America (ASA)
            0001-4966
            April 2006
            April 2006
            : 119
            : 4
            : 1950-1953
            Article
            10.1121/1.2178721
            16642808
            0ee2fccf-0555-45ac-873c-7b1e1ab3c587
            © 2006
            History

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