Title :
Auditory representations of speech sounds in a neural model: the role of peripheral processing
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. & Comput. Sci., Southampton Univ., UK
Abstract :
The categorization of speech sounds by the auditory system has been a subject of intense attention. In the author´s previous work it has been established that a two-stage computational model can mimic important aspects of the speech categorization behavior of human and animal listeners. The first stage employs a biologically motivated `front-end´ for modeling the peripheral auditory system, and the second stage is a trainable artificial neural network `back-end´ for modeling more central processes. The behavior is emergent in that it was not explicitly programmed into the model. A software model can be interrogated to find out the contribution of its component parts to the overall behavior. Replacing the auditory front-end by a more prosaic fast Fourier transform analyzer allows one to focus on the contribution of the acoustic in auditory transformation to categorization. We find that the front-end processor is not essential to category formation but plays an important part in the boundary-movement phenomenon, by emphasizing important time frequency of the speech signal
Keywords :
fast Fourier transforms; hearing; neural nets; neurophysiology; physiological models; speech recognition; auditory representations; auditory system; categorization; fast Fourier transform; neural model; neural network; peripheral processing; software model; speech sounds; Animals; Artificial neural networks; Auditory system; Biological system modeling; Biology computing; Computational modeling; Fast Fourier transforms; Humans; Speech; Time frequency analysis;
Conference_Titel :
Neural Networks Proceedings, 1998. IEEE World Congress on Computational Intelligence. The 1998 IEEE International Joint Conference on
Conference_Location :
Anchorage, AK
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4859-1
DOI :
10.1109/IJCNN.1998.687201