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Cross-series adaptation using song and string
Authors:Robert E Remez  James E Cutting  Michael Studdert-Kennedy
Institution:1. Indiana University, 47405, Bloomington, Indiana
3. Cornell University, 14853, Ithaca, New York
4. Department of Communication Arts and Sciences, Queens College of CUNY, Flushing, New York, 11367
5. Haskins Laboratories, 06510, New Haven, Connecticut
Abstract:The acoustic-auditory feature “risetime” has been claimed to underlie both the phoneticaffricate-fricative distinction and the nonphoneticplucked-string/bowed-string distinction. We used the perceptual adaptation technique to determine whether the risetime differences of the d3a]-3a] distinction would therefore be registered by the same mechanism that mediates risetime differences for the plucked-bowed distinction. Two continua were used, one of digitally modified natural speech and one of synthetic violin sounds, in which the risetime was varied across each set of tokens from 0 msec to 80 msec in steps of 10 msec. The speech was sung and the violin notes were synthesized with the same fundamental frequency, 294 Hz. Adaptation of the category boundaries was observed only when speech adaptors were tested with the speech continuum and when violin adaptors were tested with the violin continuum. When crossseries tests were performed (violin adaptors tested with the speech series, and speech adaptors tested with the violin series), no effect of adaptation was observed. This finding indicates that these speech and violin sounds, despite obvious acoustic similarities, do not share the same feature detectors.
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