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Evidence for precategorical extrinsic vowel normalization
Authors:Matthias J. Sjerps  James M. McQueen  Holger Mitterer
Affiliation:1. Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Wundtlaan 1, 6525 XD, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
2. Behavioural Science Institute and Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Centre for Cognition, Radboud University Nijmegen, Montessorilaan 3, 6525 HR, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Abstract:Three experiments investigated whether extrinsic vowel normalization takes place largely at a categorical or a precategorical level of processing. Traditional vowel normalization effects in categorization were replicated in Experiment 1: Vowels taken from an [?]–[ε] continuum were more often interpreted as /?/ (which has a low first formant, F 1) when the vowels were heard in contexts that had a raised F 1 than when the contexts had a lowered F 1. This was established with contexts that consisted of only two syllables. These short contexts were necessary for Experiment 2, a discrimination task that encouraged listeners to focus on the perceptual properties of vowels at a precategorical level. Vowel normalization was again found: Ambiguous vowels were more easily discriminated from an endpoint [ε] than from an endpoint [?] in a high-F 1 context, whereas the opposite was true in a low-F 1 context. Experiment 3 measured discriminability between pairs of steps along the [?]–[ε] continuum. Contextual influences were again found, but without discrimination peaks, contrary to what was predicted from the same participants’ categorization behavior. Extrinsic vowel normalization therefore appears to be a process that takes place at least in part at a precategorical processing level.
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