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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

Speech perception as an active cognitive process.

TL;DR: Speech perception theories need to go beyond the current corticocentric approach in order to account for the intrinsic dynamics of the auditory encoding of speech, and may provide new insights into ways in which hearing disorders and loss may be treated either through augementation or therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-normalization and noise-robustness in early auditory representations

TL;DR: It is shown that auditory representation of the acoustic spectrum is effectively a self-normalized spectral analysis, i.e., the auditory system computes a spectrum divided by a smoothed version of itself, which induces significant effects such as spectral shape enhancement and robustness against scaling and noise corruption.
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The anatomy, physiology, acoustics and perception of speech: essential elements in analysis of the evolution of human speech

TL;DR: Non-human primates lack the anatomy that enables modern humans to produce sounds that enhance this process, as well as the neural mechanisms necessary for the voluntary control of speech articulation, which makes human speech a vehicle for rapid vocal communication.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acquired word deafness, and the temporal grain of sound representation in the primary auditory cortex.

TL;DR: It is argued that the disorder which underlies the speech discrimination deficit in the syndrome of acquired word deafness is not a generalized disorder of auditory temporal processing, but one which is largely restricted to the processing of sounds with temporal content in the milliseconds to tens ofmilliseconds time frame.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linear correlates in the speech signal: The orderly output constraint

TL;DR: This target article uses known neural models from the mustached bat and barn owl to develop a conceptualization of human processing of consonant plus vowel sequences that offers a partial solution to the noninvariance dilemma – the nontransparent relationship between the acoustic waveform and the phonetic segment.
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