2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.specom.2010.11.005
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Categorical perception of voicing, colors and facial expressions: A developmental study

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Cited by 42 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…Literacy has also been shown to influence categorical perception in speech. Serniclaes et al (2005) showed that literates displayed sharper boundary precision in response to ba-da contrasts than illiterates, an effect that correlated with reading level (Hoonhorst et al, 2011). Such findings are consistent with an increase in the fidelity of phonological representation as a consequence of literacy, yet could instead indicate a more subtle refinement of categorical boundaries rather than confirming a prior absence of phoneme level representations (Burnham, 2003).…”
Section: Changes To Phonological Representations and Literacymentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…Literacy has also been shown to influence categorical perception in speech. Serniclaes et al (2005) showed that literates displayed sharper boundary precision in response to ba-da contrasts than illiterates, an effect that correlated with reading level (Hoonhorst et al, 2011). Such findings are consistent with an increase in the fidelity of phonological representation as a consequence of literacy, yet could instead indicate a more subtle refinement of categorical boundaries rather than confirming a prior absence of phoneme level representations (Burnham, 2003).…”
Section: Changes To Phonological Representations and Literacymentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Is perceptual categorisation of speech sounds dependent on reading acquisition (Burnham, 2003)? Does literacy lead to a finer tuning of perceptual categories and, consequently, improvements in the precision of phoneme identification (Hoonhorst et al, 2011;Serniclaes, Ventura, Morais, & Kolinsky, 2005)? Or does literacy not play a crucial role, instead is it that the fidelity of phonological representations increases across development driven by the need to differentiate, within an increasingly large lexicon, between an increasing number of phonologically similar items (Garlock, Walley, & Metsala, 2001;Storkel, 2002)?…”
Section: Changes To Phonological Representations and Literacymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…faces and other stimuli according to which emotion we think they are expressing: some faces are happy, others fearful, and so on. From five months of age, or possibly much earlier (Field et al 1982), through to adulthood, humans are beer at distinguishing faces when they differ with respect to these categories than when they do not (Etcoff & Magee 1992;Gelder et al 1997;Bornstein & Arterberry 2003;Kotsoni et al 2001;Cheal & Rutherford 2011;Hoonhorst et al 2011). To illustrate, consider Figure 3.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The phonemic representation is the final product of a development process that has two important stages: the integration of universal allophonic characteristics into specific phonological characteristics of the language that happens when the individual is around one year old, and the combination of phonological characteristics into phonemic segments, which happens between 5 and 6 years old (Hoonhorst et al, 2011).…”
Section: Allophonic Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, the categorical perception is adaptive since it enables rapid classification of transient events, like the succession of phonemes in speech, by allowing neglect of irrelevant stimulus information (Bogliotti et al, 2008). To Hoonhorst et al (2011), through the transformation of sensations into discreet representations, categorical perception is an economic way of processing the information flow present in the environment.…”
Section: Speech Perception In Dyslexic Individualsmentioning
confidence: 99%