author_facet Jongman, Allard
Wang, Yue
Kim, Brian H.
Jongman, Allard
Wang, Yue
Kim, Brian H.
author Jongman, Allard
Wang, Yue
Kim, Brian H.
spellingShingle Jongman, Allard
Wang, Yue
Kim, Brian H.
Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
Speech and Hearing
Linguistics and Language
Language and Linguistics
author_sort jongman, allard
spelling Jongman, Allard Wang, Yue Kim, Brian H. 1092-4388 1558-9102 American Speech Language Hearing Association Speech and Hearing Linguistics and Language Language and Linguistics http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/1092-4388(2003/106) <jats:p>Most studies have been unable to identify reliable acoustic cues for the recognition of the English nonsibilant fricatives /f, v, θ, ð/. The present study was designed to test the extent to which the perception of these fricatives by normal-hearing adults is based on other sources of information, namely, linguistic context and visual information. In Experiment 1, target words beginning with /f/, /θ/, /s/, or /∫/ were preceded by either a semantically congruous or incongruous precursor sentence. Results showed an effect of linguistic context on the perception of the distinction between /f/ and /θ/ and on the acoustically more robust distinction between /s/ and /∫/. In Experiment 2, participants identified syllables consisting of the fricatives /f, v, θ, ð/ paired with the vowels /i, a, u/. Three conditions were contrasted: Stimuli were presented with (a) both auditory and visual information, (b) auditory information alone, or (c) visual information alone. When errors in terms of voicing were ignored in all 3 conditions, results indicated that perception of these fricatives is as good with visual information alone as with both auditory and visual information combined, and better than for auditory information alone. These findings suggest that accurate perception of nonsibilant fricatives derives from a combination of acoustic, linguistic, and visual information.</jats:p> Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
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title Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
title_unstemmed Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
title_full Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
title_fullStr Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
title_full_unstemmed Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
title_short Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
title_sort contributions of semantic and facial information to perception of nonsibilant fricatives
topic Speech and Hearing
Linguistics and Language
Language and Linguistics
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/1092-4388(2003/106)
publishDate 2003
physical 1367-1377
description <jats:p>Most studies have been unable to identify reliable acoustic cues for the recognition of the English nonsibilant fricatives /f, v, θ, ð/. The present study was designed to test the extent to which the perception of these fricatives by normal-hearing adults is based on other sources of information, namely, linguistic context and visual information. In Experiment 1, target words beginning with /f/, /θ/, /s/, or /∫/ were preceded by either a semantically congruous or incongruous precursor sentence. Results showed an effect of linguistic context on the perception of the distinction between /f/ and /θ/ and on the acoustically more robust distinction between /s/ and /∫/. In Experiment 2, participants identified syllables consisting of the fricatives /f, v, θ, ð/ paired with the vowels /i, a, u/. Three conditions were contrasted: Stimuli were presented with (a) both auditory and visual information, (b) auditory information alone, or (c) visual information alone. When errors in terms of voicing were ignored in all 3 conditions, results indicated that perception of these fricatives is as good with visual information alone as with both auditory and visual information combined, and better than for auditory information alone. These findings suggest that accurate perception of nonsibilant fricatives derives from a combination of acoustic, linguistic, and visual information.</jats:p>
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author Jongman, Allard, Wang, Yue, Kim, Brian H.
author_facet Jongman, Allard, Wang, Yue, Kim, Brian H., Jongman, Allard, Wang, Yue, Kim, Brian H.
author_sort jongman, allard
container_issue 6
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container_title Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
container_volume 46
description <jats:p>Most studies have been unable to identify reliable acoustic cues for the recognition of the English nonsibilant fricatives /f, v, θ, ð/. The present study was designed to test the extent to which the perception of these fricatives by normal-hearing adults is based on other sources of information, namely, linguistic context and visual information. In Experiment 1, target words beginning with /f/, /θ/, /s/, or /∫/ were preceded by either a semantically congruous or incongruous precursor sentence. Results showed an effect of linguistic context on the perception of the distinction between /f/ and /θ/ and on the acoustically more robust distinction between /s/ and /∫/. In Experiment 2, participants identified syllables consisting of the fricatives /f, v, θ, ð/ paired with the vowels /i, a, u/. Three conditions were contrasted: Stimuli were presented with (a) both auditory and visual information, (b) auditory information alone, or (c) visual information alone. When errors in terms of voicing were ignored in all 3 conditions, results indicated that perception of these fricatives is as good with visual information alone as with both auditory and visual information combined, and better than for auditory information alone. These findings suggest that accurate perception of nonsibilant fricatives derives from a combination of acoustic, linguistic, and visual information.</jats:p>
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spelling Jongman, Allard Wang, Yue Kim, Brian H. 1092-4388 1558-9102 American Speech Language Hearing Association Speech and Hearing Linguistics and Language Language and Linguistics http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/1092-4388(2003/106) <jats:p>Most studies have been unable to identify reliable acoustic cues for the recognition of the English nonsibilant fricatives /f, v, θ, ð/. The present study was designed to test the extent to which the perception of these fricatives by normal-hearing adults is based on other sources of information, namely, linguistic context and visual information. In Experiment 1, target words beginning with /f/, /θ/, /s/, or /∫/ were preceded by either a semantically congruous or incongruous precursor sentence. Results showed an effect of linguistic context on the perception of the distinction between /f/ and /θ/ and on the acoustically more robust distinction between /s/ and /∫/. In Experiment 2, participants identified syllables consisting of the fricatives /f, v, θ, ð/ paired with the vowels /i, a, u/. Three conditions were contrasted: Stimuli were presented with (a) both auditory and visual information, (b) auditory information alone, or (c) visual information alone. When errors in terms of voicing were ignored in all 3 conditions, results indicated that perception of these fricatives is as good with visual information alone as with both auditory and visual information combined, and better than for auditory information alone. These findings suggest that accurate perception of nonsibilant fricatives derives from a combination of acoustic, linguistic, and visual information.</jats:p> Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
spellingShingle Jongman, Allard, Wang, Yue, Kim, Brian H., Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives, Speech and Hearing, Linguistics and Language, Language and Linguistics
title Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
title_full Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
title_fullStr Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
title_full_unstemmed Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
title_short Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
title_sort contributions of semantic and facial information to perception of nonsibilant fricatives
title_unstemmed Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
topic Speech and Hearing, Linguistics and Language, Language and Linguistics
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1044/1092-4388(2003/106)