Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/25389
Title: Phonetic category recalibration : what are the categories?
Authors: Reinisch, Eva
Wozny, David R.
Mitterer, Holger
Holt, Lori L.
Keywords: Speech perception
Perceptual learning
Phonetics -- Case studies
Issue Date: 2014
Publisher: Elsevier
Citation: Reinisch, E., Wozny, D. R., Mitterer, H., & Holt, L. L. (2014). Phonetic category recalibration: What are the categories?. Journal of Phonetics, 45, 91-105.
Abstract: Listeners use lexical or visual context information to recalibrate auditory speech perception. After hearing an ambiguous auditory stimulus between /aba/ and /ada/ coupled with a clear visual stimulus (e.g., lip closure in /aba/), an ambiguous auditory-only stimulus is perceived in line with the previously seen visual stimulus. What remains unclear, however, is what exactly listeners are recalibrating: phonemes, phone sequences, or acoustic cues. To address this question we tested generalization of visually-guided auditory recalibration to (1) the same phoneme contrast cued differently (i.e., /aba/-/ada/ vs. /ibi/-/idi/ where the main cues are formant transitions in the vowels vs. burst and frication of the obstruent), (2) a different phoneme contrast cued identically (/aba/-/ada/ vs. /ama/-/ana/ both cued by formant transitions in the vowels), and (3) the same phoneme contrast with the same cues in a different acoustic context (/aba/-/ada/ vs. /ubu/-/udu/). Whereas recalibration was robust for all recalibration control trials, no generalization was found in any of the experiments. This suggests that perceptual recalibration may be more specific than previously thought as it appears to be restricted to the phoneme category experienced during exposure as well as to the specific manipulated acoustic cues. We suggest that recalibration affects context-dependent sub-lexical units.
Description: The main part of this research was conducted while the first author was working at the Department of Psychology and associated with the Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition at Carnegie Mellon University. She is now at the Department of Phonetics and Speech Processing at the University of Munich (LMU). This research was supported through grants R01 DC004674 (NIH) and 0746067 (NSF) to Lori L. Holt. Thanks go to Patrick van der Zande and Dan Acheson for help with the video recordings, and the research assistants of the Holt lab at Carnegie Mellon University for help with testing participants.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/25389
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