Perception of the [m]-[n] distinction in VC syllables.

This study complements earlier experiments on the perception of the [m]-[n] distinction in CV syllables [B. H. Repp, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 79, 1987-1999 (1986); B. H. Repp, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 82, 1525-1538 (1987)]. Six talkers produced VC syllables consisting of [m] or [n] preceded by [i, a, u]. In listening experiments, these syllables were truncated from the beginning and/or from the end, or waveform portions surrounding the point of closure were replaced with noise, so as to map out the distribution of the place of articulation information for consonant perception. These manipulations revealed that the vocalic formant transitions alone conveyed about as much place of articulation information as did the nasal murmur alone, and both signal portions were about as informative in VC as in CV syllables. Nevertheless, full VC syllables were less accurately identified than full CV syllables, especially in female speech. The reason for this was hypothesized to be the relative absence of a salient spectral change between the vowel and the murmur in VC syllables. This hypothesis was supported by the relative ineffectiveness of two additional manipulations meant to disrupt the perception of relational spectral information (channel separation or temporal separation of vowel and murmur) and by subjects' poor identification scores for brief excerpts including the point of maximal spectral change. While, in CV syllables, the abrupt spectral change from the murmur to the vowel provides important additional place of articulation information, for VC syllables it seems as if the format transitions in the vowel and the murmur spectrum functioned as independent cues.

[1]  R N Aslin,et al.  Frequency and intensity discrimination in human infants and adults. , 1985, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[2]  M. Schroeder Reference Signal for Signal Quality Studies , 1968 .

[3]  R N Ohde,et al.  Order effect of acoustic segments of VC and CV syllables on stop and vowel identification. , 1977, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[4]  R Daniloff,et al.  Perception of coarticulated nasality. , 1971, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[5]  Louis C. W. Pols,et al.  CV- and VC-transitions: a spectral study of coarticulation. Part II , 1979 .

[6]  B H Repp,et al.  On the possible role of auditory short-term adaptation in perception of the prevocalic [m]-[n] contrast. , 1987, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[7]  M. R. Petersen,et al.  Frequency and intensity discrimination in humans and monkeys. , 1985, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[8]  D. Broad,et al.  Formant-frequency trajectories in selected CVC-syllable nuclei. , 1970, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[9]  S. Blumstein,et al.  Perceptual integration of the murmur and formant transitions for place of articulation in nasal consonants. , 1984, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[10]  D. J. Sharf,et al.  Effects of coarticulation on the identification of deleted consonant and vowel sounds , 1976 .

[11]  J L Miller,et al.  Nonindependence of feature processing in initial consonants. , 1977, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[12]  D. Recasens,et al.  Place cues for nasal consonants with special reference to Catalan. , 1983, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[13]  G. E. Peterson,et al.  Duration of Syllable Nuclei in English , 1960 .

[14]  S. Blumstein,et al.  Acoustic properties for place of articulation in nasal consonants. , 1990, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[15]  Identification of deleted plosives: The effect of adding noise or applying a time window (a reply of Ohde and sharf). , 1981, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[16]  D. Massaro,et al.  Evaluation and integration of acoustic features in speech perception. , 1980, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[17]  B. Repp Perception of the [m]-[n] distinction in CV syllables. , 1986, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[18]  R. N. Ohde,et al.  Stop identification from vocalic transition plus vowel segments of CV and VC syllables: a follow-up study. , 1981, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[19]  M E Schouten,et al.  Identification of deleted consonants. , 1978, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.