2014
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.01015
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The socially weighted encoding of spoken words: a dual-route approach to speech perception

Abstract: Spoken words are highly variable. A single word may never be uttered the same way twice. As listeners, we regularly encounter speakers of different ages, genders, and accents, increasing the amount of variation we face. How listeners understand spoken words as quickly and adeptly as they do despite this variation remains an issue central to linguistic theory. We propose that learned acoustic patterns are mapped simultaneously to linguistic representations and to social representations. In doing so, we illumina… Show more

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Cited by 137 publications
(171 citation statements)
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References 95 publications
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“…Second, the extracted emotional information directly activates associated words, just as the lexical meaning of a word spreads its semantic activation to semantically associated words. Our result supports an approach in spoken word recognition where both social encoding (e.g., recognizing the emotional state of the speaker) and linguistic encoding (e.g., recognizing what word was said) occur simultaneously and are essential components of spoken word recognition (e.g., Sumner et al, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Second, the extracted emotional information directly activates associated words, just as the lexical meaning of a word spreads its semantic activation to semantically associated words. Our result supports an approach in spoken word recognition where both social encoding (e.g., recognizing the emotional state of the speaker) and linguistic encoding (e.g., recognizing what word was said) occur simultaneously and are essential components of spoken word recognition (e.g., Sumner et al, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…The general assumption has been that phonetically cued social information is either ignored or non-integral for spoken word recognition, but more recent approaches suggest this information is in fact integral to recognizing spoken words (e.g., Sumner et al, 2014). The current study focuses on one type of phonetically cued social information, phonetically cued emotional information (i.e., emotional prosody) and investigates effects of emotional prosody on spoken word recognition.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Splicing a phonetic or phonological variant associated with fast-speech reduction into a word produced in clear-speech citation form can inhibit processing relative to the fully canonical form, but that inhibition seems to arise from the variant/word mismatch rather than the presence of the variant: when the variant is left in its natural whole-word form, the word is processed as rapidly as the canonical form [what Sumner et al (2014) call "recognition equivalence"]. A similar effect might be expected to come into play with use of the MGT.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given its emphasis on such details, one of the challenges for exemplar theory has been to provide a mechanism by which listeners can nevertheless make generalizations and recognize highly variable speech input as words. In several proposals, this is accomplished with clustering (K. Johnson 1997Sumner et al 2014;Pierrehumbert 2016). The basic idea is that exemplars which are similar to each other, such as those containing the same sequence of segments or those produced by the same talker, cluster together in acoustic space.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the current study, we broaden the investigation beyond voices, and test the unique predictions of exemplar theory by focusing instead on positional variation (Sumner et al 2014). Positional variation occurs when speakers can optionally realize a segment in more than one way, but only when that segment occupies a particular position.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%