Vocal tract resonances, called formants, are the most important parameters in human speech production and perception. They encode linguistic meaning and have been shown to be perceived by a wide range of species. Songbirds are also sensitive to different formant patterns in human speech. They can categorize words differing only in their vowels based on the formant patterns independent of speaker identity in a way comparable to humans. These results indicate that speech perception mechanisms are more similar between songbirds and humans than realized before. One of the major questions regarding formant perception concerns the weighting of different formants in the speech signal ("acoustic cue weighting") and whether this process is unique to...
Recognizing other individuals by sound is a primary function of many vertebrate communication system...
Acoustic signals attenuate with the distance over which they travel, but a vocalizing animal might m...
Acoustic signals attenuate with the distance over which they travel, but a vocalizing animal might m...
Different speakers produce the same speech sound differently, yet listeners are still able to reliab...
Different speakers produce the same speech sound differently, yet listeners are still able to reliab...
Different speakers produce the same speech sound differently, yet listeners are still able to reliab...
Abstract Studies of acoustic communication often focus on the categories and units of vocalizations,...
Humans can categorize vowels based on spectral quality (vowel identity) or pitch (speaker sex). Song...
Humans can categorize vowels based on spectral quality (vowel identity) or pitch (speaker sex). Song...
Humans can categorize vowels based on spectral quality (vowel identity) or pitch (speaker sex). Song...
Different speakers produce the same speech sound differently, yet listeners are still able to reliab...
Speech sound categorization in birds seems in many ways comparable to that by humans, but it is uncl...
Research into speech perception by nonhuman animals can be crucially informative in assessing whethe...
Research into speech perception by nonhuman animals can be crucially informative in assessing whethe...
Different speakers produce the same speech sound differently, yet listeners are still able to reliab...
Recognizing other individuals by sound is a primary function of many vertebrate communication system...
Acoustic signals attenuate with the distance over which they travel, but a vocalizing animal might m...
Acoustic signals attenuate with the distance over which they travel, but a vocalizing animal might m...
Different speakers produce the same speech sound differently, yet listeners are still able to reliab...
Different speakers produce the same speech sound differently, yet listeners are still able to reliab...
Different speakers produce the same speech sound differently, yet listeners are still able to reliab...
Abstract Studies of acoustic communication often focus on the categories and units of vocalizations,...
Humans can categorize vowels based on spectral quality (vowel identity) or pitch (speaker sex). Song...
Humans can categorize vowels based on spectral quality (vowel identity) or pitch (speaker sex). Song...
Humans can categorize vowels based on spectral quality (vowel identity) or pitch (speaker sex). Song...
Different speakers produce the same speech sound differently, yet listeners are still able to reliab...
Speech sound categorization in birds seems in many ways comparable to that by humans, but it is uncl...
Research into speech perception by nonhuman animals can be crucially informative in assessing whethe...
Research into speech perception by nonhuman animals can be crucially informative in assessing whethe...
Different speakers produce the same speech sound differently, yet listeners are still able to reliab...
Recognizing other individuals by sound is a primary function of many vertebrate communication system...
Acoustic signals attenuate with the distance over which they travel, but a vocalizing animal might m...
Acoustic signals attenuate with the distance over which they travel, but a vocalizing animal might m...