Locus of Selective Adaptation in Speech Perception

Voiced (/ba/ or /da/) and voiceless (/pa/ or /ta/) consonants seem to affect different auditory system loci. On a voice-onset-time continuum (/ba/ to /pa/ or /da/ to /ta/) the selective adaptation effects produced by voiceless consonants are largely ear-independent and endure over delays of at least...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance 1986-08, Vol.12 (3), p.286-294
Hauptverfasser: Jamieson, Donald G, Cheesman, Margaret F
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container_title Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance
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creator Jamieson, Donald G
Cheesman, Margaret F
description Voiced (/ba/ or /da/) and voiceless (/pa/ or /ta/) consonants seem to affect different auditory system loci. On a voice-onset-time continuum (/ba/ to /pa/ or /da/ to /ta/) the selective adaptation effects produced by voiceless consonants are largely ear-independent and endure over delays of at least 1 min. However, voiced adapters produce selective adaptation effects that are highly ear-specific and relatively short-lived (
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subjects Adaptation, Physiological
Adolescent
Adult
Consonants
Cues
Ear - physiology
Female
Human
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Phonetics
Speech Acoustics
Speech Perception
Speech Perception - physiology
Transfer (Psychology)
title Locus of Selective Adaptation in Speech Perception
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