Exemplar models of word representations have remained ambivalent or impressionistic as to precisely what veridical auditory information is stored in individual word exemplars. Earlier models (Johnson, 1997b) suggest all perceived information was stored in memory, whereas more recent proposals (Pierrehumbert, 2002; Goldinger, 2007) suggest some degree of abstraction occurs in storing particular exemplars. Findings from the phonetic accommodation paradigm (Goldinger, 1998; Nielsen, 2011, etc.) suggest that the accumulation of new exemplars may drive the spread of sound change. At the same time, some theories of sound change suggest that perceptual biases serve as a starting point for change (Ohala, 1981, 1983). The current study investigates ...
Due to the coarticulation of vowels with consonants, the formant frequencies of U and I are lowe...
That speakers accommodate in speech production is one of the most robust findings of the work on spe...
Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-f...
Phonetic dispersion has been proposed as an explanation for a number of sound-change phenomena, incl...
In this dissertation, I investigate how word predictability in context modulates the listener’s atte...
Numerous experiments indicate that listeners retain detailed information on spoken words in memory, ...
Hestvik, ArildIn natural language, speech sounds can be represented at several levels of mental repr...
Words in casual speech are highly variable. People are able to understand multiple versions of spoke...
In this study we present a model of speech perception in which (1) memory includes a single, ordered...
To confirm the hypothesis that a phonemic perception is a process in which perceptual representation...
This study investigates the influence of adverse listening conditions on the occurrence of exemplar ...
Both subvocal articulatory rehearsal and attentional refreshing have been advanced as rehearsal mech...
In this dissertation I investigated, by using coarticulatory /u/-fronting in the alveolar context fo...
Item does not contain fulltextA given speech sound will be realized differently depending on the con...
Coarticulation makes vowels in context acoustically different from context-free vowels. Listeners so...
Due to the coarticulation of vowels with consonants, the formant frequencies of U and I are lowe...
That speakers accommodate in speech production is one of the most robust findings of the work on spe...
Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-f...
Phonetic dispersion has been proposed as an explanation for a number of sound-change phenomena, incl...
In this dissertation, I investigate how word predictability in context modulates the listener’s atte...
Numerous experiments indicate that listeners retain detailed information on spoken words in memory, ...
Hestvik, ArildIn natural language, speech sounds can be represented at several levels of mental repr...
Words in casual speech are highly variable. People are able to understand multiple versions of spoke...
In this study we present a model of speech perception in which (1) memory includes a single, ordered...
To confirm the hypothesis that a phonemic perception is a process in which perceptual representation...
This study investigates the influence of adverse listening conditions on the occurrence of exemplar ...
Both subvocal articulatory rehearsal and attentional refreshing have been advanced as rehearsal mech...
In this dissertation I investigated, by using coarticulatory /u/-fronting in the alveolar context fo...
Item does not contain fulltextA given speech sound will be realized differently depending on the con...
Coarticulation makes vowels in context acoustically different from context-free vowels. Listeners so...
Due to the coarticulation of vowels with consonants, the formant frequencies of U and I are lowe...
That speakers accommodate in speech production is one of the most robust findings of the work on spe...
Empirically-observed word frequency effects in regular sound change present a puzzle: how can high-f...