Individual differences in speech and nonspeech perception of frequency and duration
Author(s) -
Matthew J. Makashay
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
the journal of the acoustical society of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.619
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1520-8524
pISSN - 0001-4966
DOI - 10.1121/1.4784702
Subject(s) - duration (music) , perception , psychology , audiology , acoustics , mathematics , speech recognition , computer science , physics , medicine , neuroscience
This study investigates whether there are systematic individual differences in the perceptual weighting of frequency and durational speech cues for vowels and fricatives (and their nonspeech analogs) among a dialectally homogeneous group of speakers. Listeners performed AX discrimination for four separate types of stimuli: sine wave vowels, narrow‐band fricatives, synthetic vowels, and synthetic fricatives. Duration and F1 frequency were manipulated for the vowels in heed and hid, and duration and frequency of the fricative centroid in the F5 region were manipulated for the fricatives in bath and bass. Dialect production and perception tasks were included to ensure that subjects were not from dissimilar dialects. Multidimensional scaling results indicated that there are subgroups within a dialect that attend to frequency and duration differently, and that not all listeners use these cues consistently across dissimilar phones. If subgroups can have different perceptions of speech despite similar production...
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