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      Contextual influences on the internal structure of phonetic categories: a distinction between lexical status and speaking rate.

      Perception & psychophysics
      Adolescent, Adult, Attention, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Phonetics, Semantics, Speech Acoustics, Speech Perception, Speech Production Measurement

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          Abstract

          Previous research has shown that phonetic categories have a graded internal structure that is highly dependent on acoustic-phonetic contextual factors, such as speaking rate; these factors alter not only the location of phonetic category boundaries, but also the location of a category's best exemplars. The purpose of the present investigation, which focused on the voiceless category as specified by voice onset time (VOT), was to determine whether a higher order linguistic contextual factor, lexical status, which is known to alter the location of the voiced-voiceless phonetic category boundary, also alters the location of the best exemplars of the voiceless category. The results indicated that lexical status has a more limited and qualitatively different effect on the category's best exemplars than does the acoustic-phonetic factor of speaking rate. This dissociation is discussed in terms of a production-based account in which perceived best exemplars of a category track contextual variation in speech production.

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