Voice or speaker recognition is critical in a wide variety of social contexts. In this study, we investigated the contributions of acoustic, phonological, lexical, and semantic information toward voice recognition. Native English speaking participants were trained to recognize five speakers in five conditions: non-speech, Mandarin, German, pseudo-English, and English. We showed that voice recognition significantly improved as more information became available, from purely acoustic features in non-speech to additional phonological information varying in familiarity. Moreover, we found that the recognition performance is transferable between training and testing in phonologically familiar conditions (German, pseudo-English, and English), but ...
Traditional conceptions of spoken language assume that speech recognition and talker identification ...
Abstract The acoustic signal of speech is a complex signal that simultaneously cues the linguistic c...
We can recognize familiar people by their voices, and familiar talkers are more intelligible than un...
Voice or speaker recognition is critical in a wide variety of social contexts. In this study, we inv...
Previous studies examined various factors influencing voice recognition and learning with mixed resu...
Voice recognition plays an important role in human communication and there is increasing interest in...
The ability to recognize people by their voice is an important social behavior. Individuals differ i...
The aim of the study is to investigate whether naïve listeners can recognise a voice spoken in a lan...
Humans have the ability to recognize other humans by voice alone. This is important both socially an...
The ability to recognize individual conspe-cifics from their communicative vocal-izations is an adap...
Listeners identify talkers more accurately when they are familiar with both the sounds and words of ...
Information from speech recognition can be used in various ways in state-of-the-art speaker recognit...
The acoustic signal of speech cues information about who is speaking in addition to a talker’s conce...
SummaryWe are all voice experts. First and foremost, we can produce and understand speech, and this ...
Adult listeners more accurately identify talkers speaking a known language than a foreign language (...
Traditional conceptions of spoken language assume that speech recognition and talker identification ...
Abstract The acoustic signal of speech is a complex signal that simultaneously cues the linguistic c...
We can recognize familiar people by their voices, and familiar talkers are more intelligible than un...
Voice or speaker recognition is critical in a wide variety of social contexts. In this study, we inv...
Previous studies examined various factors influencing voice recognition and learning with mixed resu...
Voice recognition plays an important role in human communication and there is increasing interest in...
The ability to recognize people by their voice is an important social behavior. Individuals differ i...
The aim of the study is to investigate whether naïve listeners can recognise a voice spoken in a lan...
Humans have the ability to recognize other humans by voice alone. This is important both socially an...
The ability to recognize individual conspe-cifics from their communicative vocal-izations is an adap...
Listeners identify talkers more accurately when they are familiar with both the sounds and words of ...
Information from speech recognition can be used in various ways in state-of-the-art speaker recognit...
The acoustic signal of speech cues information about who is speaking in addition to a talker’s conce...
SummaryWe are all voice experts. First and foremost, we can produce and understand speech, and this ...
Adult listeners more accurately identify talkers speaking a known language than a foreign language (...
Traditional conceptions of spoken language assume that speech recognition and talker identification ...
Abstract The acoustic signal of speech is a complex signal that simultaneously cues the linguistic c...
We can recognize familiar people by their voices, and familiar talkers are more intelligible than un...