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Journal ArticleDOI

Perceptual invariance and onset spectra for stop consonants in different vowel environments

Sheila E. Blumstein, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1976 - 
- Vol. 67, Iss: 2, pp 648-662
TLDR
In this paper, a series of perception experiments were conducted to determine if a brief stimulus in which only the spectral information at onset is preserved provides sufficient cues for identification of place of articulation across vowel contexts, and if it does, to define further the nature and size of the spectral window.
Abstract
In this series of perception experiments, we have attempted (a) to determine if a brief stimulus in which only the spectral information at onset is preserved provides sufficient cues for identification of place of articulation across vowel contexts, and (b) if it does, to define further the nature and size of the spectral window. Subjects were randomly presented with synthetically produced stimuli consisting of a 5‐ or 10‐msec noise burst followed by a brief voiced interval containing three formant transitions with onset and offset characteristics appropriate to the consonants [b, d, g] in the environment of the vowels [a, i, u], as well as stimuli with steady second‐ and third‐formant transitions. The length of the voiced interval was systematically varied from 40 to 5 msec. The results indicate that an onset spectrum consisting of the burst plus the initial 5 or 10 msec of voicing provide sufficient cues for the identification of the stop consonant, and that vocalic information can be reliably derived from these brief stimuli containing only one or two glottal pulses. [Research approved by an NIH grant.]

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Journal ArticleDOI

Atypical hemispheric asymmetries for the processing of phonological features in children with rolandic epilepsy.

TL;DR: BECTS-L interferes with the development of left hemisphere dominance for specific phonological mechanisms, and is consistent with the shift from global to finer-grained acoustic analysis predicted by the Developmental Weighting Shift model.
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Perceptual effects of plosive feature modification

TL;DR: This experiment explores the impact of modifying the strength of the acoustic burst feature on the recognition scores P(c)(SNR) (function of the signal-to-noise ratio) for four plosive sounds, and concludes that these bursts are the primary acoustic cues used for the identification of these four consonants.
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A psychoacoustic-masking model to predict the perception of speech-like stimuli in noise

TL;DR: A time/frequency, multi-look masking model is proposed to predict the detection and discrimination of speech-like stimuli in a variety of noise environments and vowel contexts and is successful in predicting masked thresholds of spectrally shaped noise bursts, glides, and formant transitions of varying durations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Age differences for stop-consonant and vowel perception in adults.

TL;DR: Findings for the duration of stop-consonant transitions indicate reductions in processing speed with age, and did not support the age-related deficit hypothesis for adult identification of vowels and consonants from dynamic spectral cues.
Journal ArticleDOI

A time-varying analysis method for rapid transitions in speech

TL;DR: A linear predictive coding (LPC) model based on time-dependent poles which has yielded promising results when applied to synthetic data is applied to real speech data and tracks the formants well, both in stable regions and in regions of transition.
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