DocumentCode
312290
Title
Perceptual organization of speech in one and several modalities: common functions, common resources
Author
Remez, Robert E.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Psychol., Barnard Coll., New York, NY, USA
Volume
3
fYear
1996
fDate
3-6 Oct 1996
Firstpage
1660
Abstract
In order to understand speech, the perceiver meets two challenges: (1) to find a speech signal within ongoing sensory activity, and (2) to project its properties into linguistic phonetic attributes. These functions have customarily been designated as perceptual organization and perceptual analysis. The case of multimodal perceptual organization is revealing to consider because the perceiver finds sensory ingredients spanning modalities. Contemporary accounts offer alternative conceptualizations of these functions based largely on the study of single modalities. A Gestalt derived account hypothesizes that perceptual organization precedes analysis, grouping sensory elements into perceptual streams by a variety of similarity criteria. An account deriving from probabilistic functionalism describes analysis occurring within modalities preceding a stage of organization that binds the derived features. These alternatives and their hybrids appear implausible on empirical and theoretical grounds for accommodating multimodal perceptual organization. Additionally, our studies using sinewave replicas of utterances reveal that the customary models are untenable accounts of unimodal no less than multimodal perceptual organization. A third way, justified by our results, describes auditory perceptual organization of sinewave sentences as a specific instance of the general susceptibility to coherent sensory variation. This account potentially allows a single description of uni- and multimodal perceptual organization
Keywords
cognitive systems; probability; psychology; speech; speech processing; Gestalt derived account; auditory perceptual organization; coherent sensory variation; linguistic phonetic attributes; multimodal perceptual organization; ongoing sensory activity; perceptual analysis; perceptual streams; probabilistic functionalism; sensory elements; sensory ingredients; similarity criteria; sinewave replicas; sinewave sentences; speech signal; speech understanding; utterances; Ear; Educational institutions; Prototypes; Psychology; Rain; Signal analysis; Speech analysis;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Spoken Language, 1996. ICSLP 96. Proceedings., Fourth International Conference on
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-3555-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICSLP.1996.607944
Filename
607944
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