Categories and boundaries in speech and music*

Perceptual categories and boundaries arise when Ss respond to continuous variation on a physical dimension in a discontinuous fashion. It is more difficult to discriminate between members of the same category than to discriminate between members of different categories, even though the amount of physical difference between both pairs is the same. Speech stimuli have been the sole class of auditory signals to yield such perception; for example, each different consonant phoneme serves as a category label. Experiment I demonstrates that categories and boundaries occur for both speechand nonspeech stimuli differing in rise time. Experiment II shows that rise time cues categorical differences in both complex and simple nonspeech waveforms. Taken together, these results suggest that certain aspects of speech perception are intimately related to processes and mechanisms exploited in other domains. The many categories in speech may be based on categories that occur elsewhere in auditory perception.

[1]  I. Pollack,et al.  The Information of Elementary Multidimensional Auditory Displays , 1954 .

[2]  G. A. Miller THE PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW THE MAGICAL NUMBER SEVEN, PLUS OR MINUS TWO: SOME LIMITS ON OUR CAPACITY FOR PROCESSING INFORMATION 1 , 1956 .

[3]  B. C. Griffith,et al.  The discrimination of speech sounds within and across phoneme boundaries. , 1957, Journal of experimental psychology.

[4]  A. Liberman,et al.  The discrimination of relative onset-time of the components of certain speech and nonspeech patterns. , 1961, Journal of experimental psychology.

[5]  P. Fraisse The psychology of time , 1963 .

[6]  L. Lisker,et al.  A Cross-Language Study of Voicing in Initial Stops: Acoustical Measurements , 1964 .

[7]  H. Lane,et al.  THE MOTOR THEORY OF SPEECH PERCEPTION: A CRITICAL REVIEW. , 1965, Psychological review.

[8]  A M Liberman,et al.  Perception of the speech code. , 1967, Psychological review.

[9]  Franklin S. Cooper,et al.  Computer‐Controlled PCM System for Investigation of Dichotic Speech Perception , 1969 .

[10]  M. Studdert-Kennedy,et al.  Theoretical notes. Motor theory of speech perception: a reply to Lane's critical review. , 1970, Psychological review.

[11]  Terry G. Halwes,et al.  Discrimination in speech and nonspeech modes , 1971 .

[12]  Alvin M. Liberman,et al.  Language Codes and Memory Codes. , 1971 .

[13]  S. Locke,et al.  Categorical perception in a non-linguistic mode. , 1973, Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior.

[14]  Philip Lieberman,et al.  On the evolution of language: A unified view , 1973 .

[15]  Category Boundaries for Speech and Nonspeech Sounds , 1974 .

[16]  J. Cutting Different speech-processing mechanisms can be reflected in the results of discrimination and dichotic listening tasks , 1974 .

[17]  Richard E. Pastore,et al.  Discrimination and Labeling of Noise-Buzz Sequences with Varying Noise-Lead Times , 1974 .

[18]  B. Auditory and phonetic memory codes in the discrimination of consonants and vowels * , 2022 .