Title of article
Rapid access to speech gestures in perception: Evidence from choice and simple response time tasks
Author/Authors
Fowler، Carol A. نويسنده , , Brown، Julie M. نويسنده , , Sabadini، Laura نويسنده , , Weihing، Jeffrey نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
-395
From page
396
To page
0
Abstract
Participants took part in two speech tests. In both tests, a model speaker produced vowel-consonant-vowels (VCVs) in which the initial vowel varied unpredictably in duration. In the simple response task, participants shadowed the initial vowel; when the model shifted to production of any of three CVs (/pa/, /ta/ or /ka/), participants produced a CV that they were assigned to say (one of/pa/, /ta/ or /ka/). In the choice task, participants shadowed the initial vowel; when the model shifted to a CV, participants shadowed that too. We found that, measured from the modelʹs onset of closure for the consonant to the participantʹs closure onset, response times in the choice task exceeded those in the simple task by just 26ms. This is much shorter than the canonical difference between simple and choice latencies [100-150 ms according to Luce (1986)] and is near the fastest simple times that Luce reports. The findings imply rapid access to articulatory speech information in the choice task. A second experiment found much longer choice times when the perception-production link for speech could not be exploited. A third experiment and an acoustic analysis verified that our measurement from closure in Experiment I provided a valid marker of speakersʹ onsets of consonant production. A final experiment showed that shadowing responses are imitations of the modelʹs speech. We interpret the findings as evidence that listeners rapidly extract information about speakersʹ articulatory gestures.
Keywords
Motor theory of speech perception , Choice reaction time , Simple reaction time , Acoustic theories of speech perception , Direct realism
Journal title
Journal of Memory and Language
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Journal of Memory and Language
Record number
65776
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