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Neighboring spectral content influences vowel identification
Authors:Holt L L  Lotto A J  Kluender K R
Institution:Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, USA. lholt@andrew.cmu.edu
Abstract:Four experiments explored the relative contributions of spectral content and phonetic labeling in effects of context on vowel perception. Two 10-step series of CVC syllables (bVb] and dVd]) varying acoustically in F2 midpoint frequency and varying perceptually in vowel height from delta] to epsilon] were synthesized. In a forced-choice identification task, listeners more often labeled vowels as delta] in dVd] context than in bVb] context. To examine whether spectral content predicts this effect, nonspeech-speech hybrid series were created by appending 70-ms sine-wave glides following the trajectory of CVC F2's to 60-ms members of a steady-state vowel series varying in F2 frequency. In addition, a second hybrid series was created by appending constant-frequency sine-wave tones equivalent in frequency to CVC F2 onset/offset frequencies. Vowels flanked by frequency-modulated glides or steady-state tones modeling dVd] were more often labeled as delta] than were the same vowels surrounded by nonspeech modeling bVb]. These results suggest that spectral content is important in understanding vowel context effects. A final experiment tested whether spectral content can modulate vowel perception when phonetic labeling remains intact. Voiceless consonants, with lower-amplitude more-diffuse spectra, were found to exert less of an influence on vowel perception than do their voiced counterparts. The data are discussed in terms of a general perceptual account of context effects in speech perception.
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