370 research outputs found
Coping with gradient forms of /t/-deletion and lexical ambiguity in spoken word recognition
This study investigates how listeners cope with gradient forms of deletion of word-final /t/ when recognising words in a phonological context that makes /t/-deletion viable. A corpus study confirmed a high incidence of /t/-deletion in an /st#b/ context in Dutch. A discrimination study showed that differences between released /t/, unreleased /t/ and fully deleted /t/ in this specific /st#b/ context were salient. Two on-line experiments were carried out to investigate whether lexical activation might be affected by this form variation. Even though unreleased and released variants were processed equally fast by listeners, a detailed analysis of the unreleased condition provided evidence for gradient activation. Activating a target ending in /t/ is slowest for the most reduced variant because phonological context has to be taken into account. Importantly, activation for a target with /t/ in the absence of cues for /t/ is reduced if there is a surface-matching lexical competitor
Native 'um's elicit prediction of low-frequency referents, but non-native 'um's do not
Speech comprehension involves extensive use of prediction. Linguistic prediction may be guided by the semantics or syntax, but also by the performance characteristics of the speech signal, such as disfluency. Previous studies have shown that listeners, when presented with the filler uh, exhibit a disfluency bias for discourse-new or unknown referents, drawing inferences about the source of the disfluency. The goal of the present study is to study the contrast between native and non-native disfluencies in speech comprehension. Experiment 1 presented listeners with pictures of high-frequency (e.g., a hand) and low-frequency objects (e.g., a sewing machine) and with fluent and disfluent instructions. Listeners were found to anticipate reference to low-frequency objects when encountering disfluency, thus attributing disfluency to speaker trouble in lexical retrieval. Experiment 2 showed that, when participants listened to disfluent non-native speech, no anticipation of low-frequency referents was observed. We conclude that listeners can adapt their predictive strategies to the (non-native) speaker at hand, extending our understanding of the role of speaker identity in speech comprehension
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Self-monitoring of speech errors: effects of phonetic contrast
Speech sound errors are known to occur more often as the interfering speech sounds are phonetically more similar. This paper aims to test the general hypothesis that the phonetic contrast between interfering speech sounds also mediates the odds of detection and repair of such a speech error. This was investigated by re-analyzing responses from four published experiments in which speech errors had been elicited, here using Bayesian modeling with random effects of participants and stimuli. Results show that with increasing phonetic contrast among the segment involved, speech errors occur less frequently (as expected); those errors tend to be detected and repaired more frequently, with early repairs being more prevalent than late repairs, as predicted. These patterns suggest that repair is not triggered by conflict during production, but by error detection during self-monitoring
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