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Labelling and discrimination of a synthetic fricative continuum noise: A study of absolute in duration and relative onset time cues

Author(s): Childers, D. G., Lalwani, A. L.

Journal/Book: J Speech Hear Res. 1996; 39: 10801 Rockville Pike Rd, Rockville, MD 20852-3279. Amer Speech-Lang-Hearing Assn. 4-18.

Abstract: Categorical perception was evaluated for a nine-token voice onset time (VOT) continuum with endpoint tokens /feil/veil/. The synthetic speech continuum was presented in a random-level noise masker at different signal-to-noise ratios (SNR = 0, +6, +12 dB) and overall presentation levels (50 and 70 dB HL). Overall labelling performance deteriorated as the SNR was reduced. Labelling results for the +12-dB-SNR condition reflected a category boundary at 87 ms for listeners with normal hearing sensitivity. The companion two-step discrimination function revealed better-than-chance performance between pairs of tokens labelled fail, chance performance between pairs of tokens labelled vail, and a slight performance peak at the labelling boundary between fail and vail, Listeners with high-frequency audiometric deficits produced labelling results for the +12-dB-SNR condition that were similar to normal functions measured for the 0-dB-SNR condition. These listeners were unable to discriminate two-step differences in voicing duration, but they produced a normal temporal labelling boundary. To try to understand the noncategorical discrimination data, a psychoacoustic analog for the speech continuum was evaluated. Relative onset time (ROT) difference limens (DLs) were measured as a function of the temporal onset delay of a low-frequency sawtooth waveform relative to the onset of a high-frequency noise burst. The ROT cue was used only when absolute stimulus duration could not be relied upon as a consistent cue, under conditions where a large range of random overall duration was presented to the listener. The ROT DLs were relatively invariant over a range of standard delays from 50 to 110 ms. The average DL was about 30 ms, which is consistent with the small performance peak in the synthetic speech discrimination function.

Note: Article C Formby, Univ Maryland, Dept Surg, Div Otolaryngol, Hns, Profess Bldg, 419 W Redwood St, Suite 360, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA

Keyword(s): synthetic speech perception; masking; fricatives; noise-induced hearing loss; temporal acuity; NON-CATEGORICAL PERCEPTION; SPEECH-PERCEPTION; CONSONANTS


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