How abstract phonemic categories are necessary for coping with speaker-related variation

Anne Cutler, Frank Eisner, James M. McQueen, Dennis Norris

    Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperChapter

    Abstract

    ![CDATA[Listeners can cope with considerable variation in the way that different speakers talk. We argue here that they can do so because of a process of phonological abstraction in the speech-recognition system.We review evidence that listeners adjust the bounds of phonemic categories after only very limited exposure to a deviant realisation of a given phoneme. This learning can be talker-specific and is stable over time; further, the learning generalizes to previously unheard words containing the deviant phoneme. Together these results suggest that the learning involves adjustment of prelexical phonemic representations which mediate between the speech signal and the mental lexicon during word recognition. We argue that such an abstraction process is inconsistent with claims made by some recent models of language processing that the mental lexicon consists solely of multiple detailed traces of acoustic episodes. Simulations with a purely episodic model without functional prelexical abstraction confirm that such a model cannot account for the evidence on lexical generalization of perceptual learning. We conclude that abstract phonemic categories form a necessary part of lexical access, and that the ability to store talker-specific knowledge about those categories provides listeners with the means to deal with cross-talker variation.]]
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationLaboratory Phonology 10
    EditorsCecile Fougeron, Barbara Kühnert, Mariapaola D’Imperio, Nathalie Vallee
    Place of PublicationGermany
    PublisherMouton de Gruyter
    Pages91-111
    Number of pages21
    ISBN (Print)9783110224917
    Publication statusPublished - 2010

    Keywords

    • speech perception
    • phonetics
    • word recognition
    • auditory perception

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