Experiments On Tone Perception

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Experiments on Tone Perception

Author : Reinier Plomp
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 198 pages
File Size : 42,9 Mb
Release : 1966
Category : Audiometry
ISBN : UCAL:B4219150

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Experiments on Tone Perception by Reinier Plomp Pdf

The Influence of Frequency and Intensity Patterns on the Perception of Pitch

Author : Heather Moynihan Johnston
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 128 pages
File Size : 49,8 Mb
Release : 2005
Category : Auditory perception
ISBN : OCLC:62784752

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The Influence of Frequency and Intensity Patterns on the Perception of Pitch by Heather Moynihan Johnston Pdf

Abstract: Recent work on auditory pitch perception has shown that when listeners hear a sequence of tones increasing or decreasing in frequency, their judgments regarding the pitch of a tone appear to shift in the direction implied by the immediately preceding context sequence. One explanation for these results is that expectations are generated by exposure to a dynamic frequency pattern and as a result listeners make systematic pitch judgment errors specific to continuation of the frequency pattern. The main goal of this study is to determine whether dynamic intensity changes, like dynamic frequency changes, also contribute to pattern-based expectations in listeners. In a series of four experiments, listeners heard context sequences of tones that changed dynamically in frequency and intensity, and judged whether the pitch of a variable final tone (probe) was the same as or different from the immediately preceding tone. Experiment 1 sequences comprised simple monotonically changing frequency and intensity patterns. In Experiment 2, listeners heard longer sequences that implied periodically changing frequency and intensity patterns. And using the same frequency patterns from Experiment 2, Experiment 3 incorporated regularly recurring intensity accents and sequences in Experiment 4 included randomly occurring intensity accents. Results are discussed in terms of hypotheses associated with internalized physical principles, pattern-based expectations, and dimensional congruency.

Lexical Tone Perception in Infants and Young Children: Empirical studies and theoretical perspectives

Author : Leher Singh,Denis Burnham,Jessica Hay,Liquan Liu,Karen Mattock
Publisher : Frontiers Media SA
Page : 270 pages
File Size : 42,8 Mb
Release : 2019-11-20
Category : Electronic
ISBN : 9782889630615

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Lexical Tone Perception in Infants and Young Children: Empirical studies and theoretical perspectives by Leher Singh,Denis Burnham,Jessica Hay,Liquan Liu,Karen Mattock Pdf

In psycholinguistic research there has traditionally been a strong emphasis on understanding how particular language types of are processed and learned . In particular, Romance and Germanic languages (e.g. English, French, German) have, until recently, received more attention than other types, such as Chinese languages. This has led to selective emphasis on the phonological building blocks of European languages, consonants and vowels, to the exclusion of lexical tones which, like consonants and vowels, determine lexical meaning, but unlike consonants and vowels are based on pitch variations. Lexical tone is pervasive; it is used in at least half of the world’ languages (Maddieson, 2013), e.g., most Asian and some African, Central American, and European languages. This Research Topic brings together a collection of recent empirical research on the processing and representation of lexical tones across the lifespan with an emphasis on advancing knowledge on how tone systems are acquired. The articles focus on various aspects of tone: early perception of tones, influences of tone on word learning, the acquisition of new tone systems, and production of tones. One set of articles report on tone perception at the earliest stage of development, in infants learning either tone or non-tone languages. Tsao and Chen et al. demonstrate that infants’ sensitivity to Mandarin lexical tones, as well as pitch, improves over the first year of life in native and non-native learners in contrast to traditional accounts of perceptual narrowing for consonants and vowels. Götz et al. report a different pattern of perception for Cantonese tones and further demonstrate influences of methodological approaches on infants’ tone sensitivity. Fan et al. demonstrate that sensitivity to less well-studied properties of tone languages, such as neutral tone, may develop after the first year of life. Cheng and Lee ask a similar question in an electrophysiological study and report effects of stimulus salience on infants’ neural response to native tones. In a complementary set of studies focused on tone sensitivity in word learning, Burnham et al. demonstrate that infants bind tones to newly-learned words if they are learning a tone language, either monolingually or bilingually; although it was also found that object-word binding was influenced by the properties of individual tones. Liu and Kager chart a developmental trajectory over the second year of life in which infants narrow in their interpretation of non-native tones. Choi et al. investigate how learning a tone language can influence uptake of other suprasegmental properties of language, such as stress, and demonstrate that native tone sensitivity in children can facilitate stress sensitivity when learning a stress-based language. Finally, two studies focus on sensitivity to pitch in a sub-class tone languages: pitch accent languages. In a study on Japanese children’s abilities to recognise words they know, Ota et al. demonstrate a limited sensitivity to native pitch contrasts in toddlers. In contrast, Ramachers et al. demonstrate comparatively strong sensitivity to pitch in native and non-native speakers of a different pitch accent system (Limburghian) when learning new words. Several studies focus on learning new tone systems. In a training study with school-aged children, Kasisopa et al. demonstrate that tone language experience increases children’s abilities to learn new tone contrasts. Poltrock et al. demonstrate similar advantages of tone experience in learning new tone systems in adults. And in an elecrophysiological study, Liu et al. demonstrate order effects in adults’ neural responses to new tones, discussing implications for learning tone languages as an adult. Finally, Hannah et al. demonstrate that extralinguistic cues, such as facial expression, can support adults’ learning of new tone systems. In three studies investigating tone production, Rattansone et al. report the results of a study demonstrating kindergartners’ asynchronous mastery of tones – delayed acquisition of tone sandhi forms relative to base forms. In a study interrogating a corpus of adult tone production, Han et al. demonstrate that mothers produce tones in a distinct manner when speaking to infants; tone differences are emphasised more when speaking to infants than to adults. Combining perception and production of tones, Wong et al. report asynchronous development of tone perception and tone production in children. The Research Topic also includes a series of Opinion pieces and Commentaries addressing the broader relevance of tone and pitch to the study of language acquisition. Curtin and Werker discuss ways in which tone can be integrated into their model of infant language development (PRIMIR). Best discusses the phonological status of lexical tones and considers how recent empirical research on tone perception bears on this question. Kager focuses on how language learners distinguish lexical tones from other sources of pitch variation (e.g., affective and pragmatic) that also inform language comprehension. Finally, Antoniou and Chin unite evidence of tone sensitivity from children and adults and discuss how these areas of research can be mutually informative. Psycholinguistic studies of lexical tone acquisition have burgeoned over the past 13 years. This collection of empirical studies and opinion pieces provides a state-of-the-art panoply of the psycholinguistic study of lexical tones, and demonstrate its coming of age. The articles in this Research Topic will help address the hitherto Eurocentric non-tone language research emphasis, and will contribute to an expanding narrative of speech perception, speech production, and language acquisition that includes all of the world’s languages. Importantly, these studies underline the scientific promise of drawing from tone languages in psycholinguistic research; the research questions raised by lexical tone are unique and distinct from those typically applied to more widely studied languages and populations. The comprehensive study of language acquisition can only benefit from this expanded focus.

Perception and Production of Mandarin Tones by Native Speakers and L2 Learners

Author : Bei Yang
Publisher : Springer
Page : 162 pages
File Size : 41,8 Mb
Release : 2015-02-10
Category : Foreign Language Study
ISBN : 9783662446454

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Perception and Production of Mandarin Tones by Native Speakers and L2 Learners by Bei Yang Pdf

Tones are the most challenging aspect of learning Chinese as a second language, and L2 learners’ perceptual categories differ in important and fascinating ways from those of native speakers. This book explores the relationship between tone perception and production among native speakers and non-native learners as illustrated in the experiments the author conducted with native speakers, true learners and heritage learners, all of whom were tested on their ability to produce tones naturally and to perceive 81 synthesized tones in various contexts. The experiments show that each group processes tones differently with regard to both register (tonal level) and contour (tonal shape). The results also reveal how three types of cues – acoustic, psychological and contextual – influence non-native speakers’ tone perception and production.

Aspects of Tone Sensation

Author : Reinier Plomp
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 190 pages
File Size : 53,7 Mb
Release : 1976
Category : Medical
ISBN : UOM:39015000808199

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Aspects of Tone Sensation by Reinier Plomp Pdf

Harmony: A Psychoacoustical Approach

Author : Richard Parncutt
Publisher : Springer Science & Business Media
Page : 216 pages
File Size : 41,9 Mb
Release : 2012-12-06
Category : Science
ISBN : 9783642748318

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Harmony: A Psychoacoustical Approach by Richard Parncutt Pdf

My first encounter with the theory of harmony was during my last year at school (1975). This fascinating system of rules crystallized the intuitive knowledge of harmony I had acquired from years of piano playing, and facilitated memorization, transcription, arrangement and composition. For the next five years, I studied music (piano) and science (Physics) at the Univer sity of Melbourne. This "strange combination" started me wondering about the origins of those music theory "rules". To what extent were they determined or influenced by physics? mathematics? physiology? conditioning? In 1981, the supervisor of my honours project in musical acoustics, Neville Fletcher, showed me an article entitled "Pitch, consonance, and harmony", by a certain Ernst Terhardt of the Technical University of Munich. By that stage, I had devoured a considerable amount of (largely unsatisfactory) material on the nature and origins of harmony, which enabled me to recognize the significance of Terhardt's article. But it was not until I arrived in Munich the following year (on Terhardt's invitation) that I began to appreciate the conse quences of his "psychoacoustical" approach for the theory of harmony. That is what this book is about. The book presents Terhardt's work against the broad context of music perception research, past and present. Music perception is a multidisciplinary mixture of physics, psychology and music. Where different theoretical ap proaches appear contradictory, I try to show instead that they complement and enrich one another.

Tonal Perception in Speech

Author : David House
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 176 pages
File Size : 50,6 Mb
Release : 1990
Category : Grammar, Comparative and general
ISBN : UOM:39015025146807

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Tonal Perception in Speech by David House Pdf

Computational Auditory Scene Analysis

Author : David F. Rosenthal,Hiroshi G. Okuno,Hiroshi Okuno,David Rosenthal
Publisher : CRC Press
Page : 414 pages
File Size : 42,9 Mb
Release : 2021-01-31
Category : Technology & Engineering
ISBN : 9781000106114

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Computational Auditory Scene Analysis by David F. Rosenthal,Hiroshi G. Okuno,Hiroshi Okuno,David Rosenthal Pdf

The interest of AI in problems related to understanding sounds has a rich history dating back to the ARPA Speech Understanding Project in the 1970s. While a great deal has been learned from this and subsequent speech understanding research, the goal of building systems that can understand general acoustic signals--continuous speech and/or non-speech sounds--from unconstrained environments is still unrealized. Instead, there are now systems that understand "clean" speech well in relatively noiseless laboratory environments, but that break down in more realistic, noisier environments. As seen in the "cocktail-party effect," humans and other mammals have the ability to selectively attend to sound from a particular source, even when it is mixed with other sounds. Computers also need to be able to decide which parts of a mixed acoustic signal are relevant to a particular purpose--which part should be interpreted as speech, and which should be interpreted as a door closing, an air conditioner humming, or another person interrupting. Observations such as these have led a number of researchers to conclude that research on speech understanding and on nonspeech understanding need to be united within a more general framework. Researchers have also begun trying to understand computational auditory frameworks as parts of larger perception systems whose purpose is to give a computer integrated information about the real world. Inspiration for this work ranges from research on how different sensors can be integrated to models of how humans' auditory apparatus works in concert with vision, proprioception, etc. Representing some of the most advanced work on computers understanding speech, this collection of papers covers the work being done to integrate speech and nonspeech understanding in computer systems.

Neural Mechanisms of Perceptual Categorization as Precursors to Speech Perception

Author : Einat Liebenthal,Lynne E. Bernstein
Publisher : Frontiers Media SA
Page : 188 pages
File Size : 49,6 Mb
Release : 2017-05-03
Category : Electronic book
ISBN : 9782889451586

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Neural Mechanisms of Perceptual Categorization as Precursors to Speech Perception by Einat Liebenthal,Lynne E. Bernstein Pdf

Perceptual categorization is fundamental to the brain’s remarkable ability to process large amounts of sensory information and efficiently recognize objects including speech. Perceptual categorization is the neural bridge between lower-level sensory and higher-level language processing. A long line of research on the physical properties of the speech signal as determined by the anatomy and physiology of the speech production apparatus has led to descriptions of the acoustic information that is used in speech recognition (e.g., stop consonants place and manner of articulation, voice onset time, aspiration). Recent research has also considered what visual cues are relevant to visual speech recognition (i.e., the visual counter-parts used in lipreading or audiovisual speech perception). Much of the theoretical work on speech perception was done in the twentieth century without the benefit of neuroimaging technologies and models of neural representation. Recent progress in understanding the functional organization of sensory and association cortices based on advances in neuroimaging presents the possibility of achieving a comprehensive and far reaching account of perception in the service of language. At the level of cell assemblies, research in animals and humans suggests that neurons in the temporal cortex are important for encoding biological categories. On the cellular level, different classes of neurons (interneurons and pyramidal neurons) have been suggested to play differential roles in the neural computations underlying auditory and visual categorization. The moment is ripe for a research topic focused on neural mechanisms mediating the emergence of speech representations (including auditory, visual and even somatosensory based forms). Important progress can be achieved by juxtaposing within the same research topic the knowledge that currently exists, the identified lacunae, and the theories that can support future investigations. This research topic provides a snapshot and platform for discussion of current understanding of neural mechanisms underlying the formation of perceptual categories and their relationship to language from a multidisciplinary and multisensory perspective. It includes contributions (reviews, original research, methodological developments) pertaining to the neural substrates, dynamics, and mechanisms underlying perceptual categorization and their interaction with neural processes governing speech perception.

The Intelligent Ear

Author : Reinier Plomp
Publisher : Psychology Press
Page : 312 pages
File Size : 49,8 Mb
Release : 2001-11-01
Category : Psychology
ISBN : 9781135647308

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The Intelligent Ear by Reinier Plomp Pdf

Plomp's Aspects of Tone Sensation--published 25 years ago--dealt with the psychophysics of simple and complex tones. Since that time, auditory perception as a field of study has undergone a radical metamorphosis. Technical and methodological innovations, as well as a considerable increase in attention to the various aspects of auditory experience, have changed the picture profoundly. This book is an attempt to account for this development by giving a comprehensive survey of the present state of the art as a whole. Perceptual aspects of hearing, particularly of understanding speech as the main auditory input signal, are thoroughly reviewed.

The Neurophysiological Bases of Auditory Perception

Author : Enrique Lopez-Poveda,Alan R. Palmer,Ray Meddis
Publisher : Springer Science & Business Media
Page : 635 pages
File Size : 41,6 Mb
Release : 2010-03-23
Category : Science
ISBN : 9781441956866

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The Neurophysiological Bases of Auditory Perception by Enrique Lopez-Poveda,Alan R. Palmer,Ray Meddis Pdf

This volume contains the papers presented at the 15th International Symposium on Hearing (ISH), which was held at the Hotel Regio, Santa Marta de Tormes, Salamanca, Spain, between 1st and 5th June 2009. Since its inception in 1969, this Symposium has been a forum of excellence for debating the neurophysiological basis of auditory perception, with computational models as tools to test and unify physiological and perceptual theories. Every paper in this symposium includes two of the following: auditory physiology, psychoph- ics or modeling. The topics range from cochlear physiology to auditory attention and learning. While the symposium is always hosted by European countries, p- ticipants come from all over the world and are among the leaders in their fields. The result is an outstanding symposium, which has been described by some as a “world summit of auditory research. ” The current volume has a bottom-up structure from “simpler” physiological to more “complex” perceptual phenomena and follows the order of presentations at the meeting. Parts I to III are dedicated to information processing in the peripheral au- tory system and its implications for auditory masking, spectral processing, and c- ing. Part IV focuses on the physiological bases of pitch and timbre perception. Part V is dedicated to binaural hearing. Parts VI and VII cover recent advances in und- standing speech processing and perception and auditory scene analysis. Part VIII focuses on the neurophysiological bases of novelty detection, attention, and learning.

Experimental Studies in Word and Sentence Prosody

Author : Carlos Gussenhoven,Tomas Riad
Publisher : Walter de Gruyter
Page : 433 pages
File Size : 51,9 Mb
Release : 2009-02-26
Category : Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN : 9783110207576

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Experimental Studies in Word and Sentence Prosody by Carlos Gussenhoven,Tomas Riad Pdf

This volume presents 14 experimental studies of lexical tone and intonation in a wide variety of languages. Six papers deal with the discriminability or the function of intonation contours and lexical tones in specific languages, as established on the basis of listener responses, as well as with brain activation patterns resulting from the perception of tonal and intonational stimuli. The remaining eight papers report on detailed phonetic findings on a variety of tonal phenomena in a number of languages, including declination in tone languages, final lowering, consonant-tone interactions and pitch target alignment.

Blackwell Handbook of Sensation and Perception

Author : E. Bruce Goldstein
Publisher : John Wiley & Sons
Page : 800 pages
File Size : 47,9 Mb
Release : 2008-04-15
Category : Psychology
ISBN : 9780470751992

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Blackwell Handbook of Sensation and Perception by E. Bruce Goldstein Pdf

This state-of-the-art handbook provides an authoritative overview of the field of perception, with special emphasis on new developments and trends. Surveys the entire field of perception, including vision, hearing, taste, olfaction, and cutaneous sensibility. Ideal for researchers and teachers looking for succinct, state-of-the-art overviews of areas outside their speciality, and for anyone wanting to know about current research and future trends. Uses a tutorial approach that results in a balanced description of topics. A 'Selected Readings' section points to general references that provide more detailed treatments of each topic; 'Additional Topics' provide references to important topics. Written by noted authorities in the field. Now available in full text online via xreferplus, the award-winning reference library on the web from xrefer. For more information, visit www.xreferplus.com

Annual Report

Author : Anonim
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 938 pages
File Size : 43,7 Mb
Release : 1896
Category : Electronic
ISBN : NYPL:33433086329269

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Annual Report by Anonim Pdf