2008
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8721.2008.00545.x
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Speech Perception Within an Auditory Cognitive Science Framework

Abstract: The complexities of the acoustic speech signal pose many significant challenges for listeners. Although perceiving speech begins with auditory processing, investigation of speech perception has progressed mostly independently of study of the auditory system. Nevertheless, a growing body of evidence demonstrates that cross-fertilization between the two areas of research can be productive. We briefly describe research bridging the study of general auditory processing and speech perception, showing that the latte… Show more

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Cited by 92 publications
(80 citation statements)
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“…Liberman et al, 1967;Liberman and Mattingly, 1985), different from nonspeech sounds. The other view proposes a general perceptual mechanism that underlies the processing of both speech and nonspeech sounds (e.g., Holt, 2006a,b;Holt and Lotto, 2008). It is yet unclear whether the processing of suprasegmental properties of speech such as lexical tones recruits the speech-specific mechanism (Francis et al, 2006), or whether the normalization of lexical tones is mediated by the general perceptual mechanism Holt, 2009, 2011).…”
Section: B Nonspeech Contextmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Liberman et al, 1967;Liberman and Mattingly, 1985), different from nonspeech sounds. The other view proposes a general perceptual mechanism that underlies the processing of both speech and nonspeech sounds (e.g., Holt, 2006a,b;Holt and Lotto, 2008). It is yet unclear whether the processing of suprasegmental properties of speech such as lexical tones recruits the speech-specific mechanism (Francis et al, 2006), or whether the normalization of lexical tones is mediated by the general perceptual mechanism Holt, 2009, 2011).…”
Section: B Nonspeech Contextmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Speech perception can be thought of as an example of a general auditory categorization task, with sound categories being mapped onto a multi-dimensional acoustic space (Goudbeek et al, 2005; Holt and Lotto, 2008; Goudbeek et al, 2009; Holt and Lotto, 2010). Speech sounds contrast on many acoustic dimensions (or “cues”), and listeners give different “weights” to these dimensions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the assumption that the phonetic categorization occurs at the phonetic level, the failure to find the context effect with the phonetic categorization task could be interpreted as supporting the dissociation between the phonetic and the phonological filtering stages as assumed by the phonological inference account. The perceptual-integration account, on the other hand, assumes that context effects are a consequence of early and mandatory auditory processes (somewhat in line with proposals form an auditory framework for speech perception, see Holt & Lotto, 2008), and therefore predicts that the context effect should be evident in any task (see Mitterer, 2011b, for a fuller development of this argument). Finding a context effect, however, does not allow us to decide between the two accounts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Classical examples of context effects in speech perception, such as normalization for speaking rate (Newman & Sawusch, 1996) and for phonemic contexts (Mann, 1980) are often assumed to arise early in the perceptual process (Holt & Lotto, 2008) and are linked to uncertainty about the identity of the target phoneme as has been evident in robust context effects for the most ambiguous targets. The different pattern for the current context effect may be taken as an indication that this arises at a later stage in the perceptual process, so that in fact certainty about the identity of the target phoneme is important for the context effect to arise.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%