What do voices contribute to acoustic context effects in speech perception?

All perception takes place in context, and speech perception is no exception. Surrounding sounds form a context that guides speech perception. This is particularly true when earlier sounds inform the perception and/or recognition of later sounds. Several lines of research have advanced models where...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2024-03, Vol.155 (3_Supplement), p.A262-A263
1. Verfasser: Stilp, Christian E.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:All perception takes place in context, and speech perception is no exception. Surrounding sounds form a context that guides speech perception. This is particularly true when earlier sounds inform the perception and/or recognition of later sounds. Several lines of research have advanced models where listeners use preceding context to account for characteristics of the talker’s voice, such as vocal tract properties, articulatory maneuvers, or the speaker’s identity. Conversely, research with nonspeech sounds and/or nonhuman animals has advanced alternative models where perception is responding more to signal acoustics than to vocal characteristics. In this talk, I will review recent evidence from our research on acoustic context effects and talker normalization when hearing speech and nonspeech (music) sounds. Parallel patterns of performance across speech and music domains are conducive to, but not definitive evidence of, acoustic context being utilized according to general signal acoustics, with speech- and voice-specific contributions coming later in the processing stream.
ISSN:0001-4966
1520-8524
DOI:10.1121/10.0027436