The ability to integrate and weight information across dimensions is central to perception and is particularly important for speech categorization. The present experiments investigate cue weighting by training participants to categorize sounds drawn from a two-dimensional acoustic space defined by the center frequency (CF) and modulation frequency (MF) of frequency-modulated sine waves. These dimensions were psychophysically matched to be equally discriminable and, in the first experiment, were equally informative for accurate categorization. Nevertheless, listeners’ category responses reflected a bias for use of CF. This bias remained even when the informativeness of CF was decreased by shifting distributions to create more overlap in CF. ...
Listeners adapt to specific speakers' speech cue distributions and generalize the adaptation to the ...
Human listeners dynamically adjust their perceptual category boundaries and cue weights following br...
This is the author's accepted manuscript. This article may not exactly replicate the final version p...
The ability to integrate and weight information across dimensions is central to perception and is pa...
Speech perception requires the integration of evidence from acoustic cues across multiple dimensions...
Complex sounds vary along a number of acoustic dimensions. These dimensions may exhibit correlations...
Previous cue integration studies have examined continuous perceptual dimensions (e.g., size) and hav...
A critical question in speech research is how listeners use non-discrete acoustic cues for discrimin...
A growing statistical learning literature suggests that listeners extract statistical information fr...
<p>Speech categories are defined by multiple acoustic dimensions, and listeners give differential we...
Listeners rely on multiple acoustic cues to recognize any phoneme. The relative contribution of thes...
Speech and music are highly redundant communication systems, with multiple acoustic cues signaling t...
We explored a mechanism for adjustments in the perceptual weighting of multiple probabilistic cues i...
Categorization is an important cognitive process. However, the correct categorization of a stimulus ...
Listeners rely on multiple acoustic cues to recognize any phoneme. The relative contribution of thes...
Listeners adapt to specific speakers' speech cue distributions and generalize the adaptation to the ...
Human listeners dynamically adjust their perceptual category boundaries and cue weights following br...
This is the author's accepted manuscript. This article may not exactly replicate the final version p...
The ability to integrate and weight information across dimensions is central to perception and is pa...
Speech perception requires the integration of evidence from acoustic cues across multiple dimensions...
Complex sounds vary along a number of acoustic dimensions. These dimensions may exhibit correlations...
Previous cue integration studies have examined continuous perceptual dimensions (e.g., size) and hav...
A critical question in speech research is how listeners use non-discrete acoustic cues for discrimin...
A growing statistical learning literature suggests that listeners extract statistical information fr...
<p>Speech categories are defined by multiple acoustic dimensions, and listeners give differential we...
Listeners rely on multiple acoustic cues to recognize any phoneme. The relative contribution of thes...
Speech and music are highly redundant communication systems, with multiple acoustic cues signaling t...
We explored a mechanism for adjustments in the perceptual weighting of multiple probabilistic cues i...
Categorization is an important cognitive process. However, the correct categorization of a stimulus ...
Listeners rely on multiple acoustic cues to recognize any phoneme. The relative contribution of thes...
Listeners adapt to specific speakers' speech cue distributions and generalize the adaptation to the ...
Human listeners dynamically adjust their perceptual category boundaries and cue weights following br...
This is the author's accepted manuscript. This article may not exactly replicate the final version p...