Does node stability underlie the verbal transformation effect? A test of node structure theory

Continuous repetition of a word causes listeners to hear the word transform into other utterances, an illusion known as the verbal transformation effect. Node structure theory (MacKay, 1987) provides a useful framework for understanding the illusion, positing that the transformations listeners report are a function of the stability of the node that represents the repeating stimulus. In Experiment 1, the accuracy of this account was investigated, using stimuli that varied from words to phonotactically illegal pseudowords. Experiments 2 and 3 replicated and generalized the findings of Experiment 1, which support a conceptualization of node stability slightly different from that embodied in node structure theory. A new method of measuring lexical influences in the verbal transformation effect is also introduced.

[1]  James L. McClelland,et al.  The TRACE model of speech perception , 1986, Cognitive Psychology.

[2]  Donald G. MacKay,et al.  H.M.'s Language Production Deficits: Implications for Relations between Memory, Semantic Binding, and the Hippocampal System ☆ ☆☆ ★ , 1998 .

[3]  P. Luce,et al.  Probabilistic Phonotactics and Neighborhood Activation in Spoken Word Recognition , 1999 .

[4]  T. Natsoulas,et al.  A STUDY OF THE VERBAL-TRANSFORMATION EFFECT. , 1965, The American journal of psychology.

[5]  R. M. Warren,et al.  Illusory changes of distinct speech upon repetition--the verbal transformation effect. , 1961, British journal of psychology.

[6]  Donald G. MacKay,et al.  Relations between Word Perception and Production - New Theory and Data on the Verbal Transformation Effect , 1993 .

[7]  David B. Pisoni,et al.  Similarity neighborhoods of spoken words , 1991 .

[8]  D. Pisoni,et al.  Recognizing Spoken Words: The Neighborhood Activation Model , 1998, Ear and hearing.

[9]  D Norris,et al.  Merging information in speech recognition: Feedback is never necessary , 2000, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[10]  R. M. Warren,et al.  An auditory analogue of the visual reversible figure. , 1958, The American journal of psychology.

[11]  Richard M. Warren Auditory Illusions and Their Relation to Mechanisms Normally Enhancing Accuracy of Perception , 1983 .

[12]  Richard M. Warren,et al.  A comparison of speech perception in childhood, maturity, and old age by means of the verbal transformation effect , 1966 .

[13]  R. M. Warren,et al.  Illusory changes in repeated words: differences between young adults and the aged. , 1961, The American journal of psychology.

[14]  D. Mackay The Organization of Perception and Action , 1987 .