Dynamic re-weighting of acoustic and contextual cues in spoken word recognition
- PMID: 31472578
- PMCID: PMC7273512
- DOI: 10.1121/1.5119271
Dynamic re-weighting of acoustic and contextual cues in spoken word recognition
Erratum in
-
Erratum: Dynamic re-weighting of acoustic and contextual cues in spoken word recognition [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 146(2), EL135-EL140 (2019)].J Acoust Soc Am. 2023 Jul 1;154(1):48-49. doi: 10.1121/10.0019956. J Acoust Soc Am. 2023. PMID: 37403996 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
Abstract
Listeners integrate acoustic and contextual cues during word recognition. However, experiments investigating this integration disrupt natural cue correlations. It was investigated whether changes in correlational structure affect listeners' relative cue weightings. Two groups of participants engaged in a word recognition task. In one group, acoustic (voice onset time) and contextual (lexical bias) cues followed natural correlations; in the other, cues were uncorrelated. When cues were correlated, cue weights were stable throughout the experiment; when cues were uncorrelated, contextual cues were down-weighted. Listeners thus can re-weight cues based on their statistical structure. Studies failing to account for re-weighting risk over/under-estimating cue importance.
Figures
References
-
- Bushong, W. , and Jaeger, T. F. (2017). “ Maintenance of perceptual information in speech perception,” Thirty-Ninth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society.
-
- Christiansen, M. H. , and Chater, N. (2016). “ The now-or-never bottleneck: A fundamental constraint on language,” Behav. Brain Sci. 39, 1–72. - PubMed
-
- Connine, C. M. , Blasko, D. G. , and Hall, M. (1991). “ Effects of subsequent sentence context in auditory word recognition: Temporal and linguistic constraints,” J. Memory Lang. 30(1), 234–250. 10.1016/0749-596X(91)90005-5 - DOI
-
- Dahan, D. (2010). “ The time course of interpretation in speech comprehension,” Current Direct. Psychol. Sci. 19(2), 121–126. 10.1177/0963721410364726 - DOI
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
