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Language & Cognition
WK5 L10: Weekly Readings
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Cards (248)
Who conducted the study on listening for mispronunciations?
Ronald A. Cole
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What was the main task given to subjects in the study?
To indicate whenever they heard a
mispronunciation
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How were mispronunciations produced in the study?
By changing one
consonant
sound in a
three-syllable
word
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What was the effect of changing one distinctive feature on mispronunciation detection?
Mispronunciations involving a
single feature change
were seldom
detected
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What was the reaction time difference when mispronunciations occurred in the first syllable?
Reaction times were at least a
third
of a second slower
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How are words identified according to the study's results?
Words are identified by their
distinctive features
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What is a phoneme?
A phoneme is a
basic
unit of sound in speech
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What do distinctive features describe in phonemes?
Distributions of
acoustic energy
accompanying a phoneme
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How many phonemes are in the word "bit"?
Three
phonemes
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What did previous experiments show about phonemes?
Phonemes are perceived, compared, and remembered in terms of their
distinctive
features
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What did Scott, Cole, and Eimas report evidence for?
Phoneme feature detectors
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What happens when a consonant phoneme is repeatedly presented?
Individual features
satiate
, causing changes in perception
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What did Warren's study reveal about syllable detection?
Subjects can detect the presence of a
target syllable
faster than a target
phoneme
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What does the faster identification of syllables suggest?
Phonemes
in a syllable may be identified in
parallel
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What is required for a listener to understand speech?
A listener must attend to certain
acoustic features
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What did Warren and Obusek's experiments demonstrate?
Listeners can "fill in" a missing
phoneme
based on linguistic context
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How did subjects localize the cough in Warren's experiment?
They localized the cough several
phonemes
away from its actual site
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What is the aim of the present study?
To examine the role of individual
acoustic features
in the perception of
ongoing speech
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How were words mispronounced in the study?
By changing one
phoneme
in the word by one, two, or four
distinctive
features
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What should result from changing a word by one distinctive feature?
Fewer
detections
of mispronunciation
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What was the composition of the subjects in the study?
Undergraduate students from an
introductory
psychology
course
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How many subjects were in each group?
15
subjects
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What was the method used to locate the onset of a phoneme?
Manually drawing the tape over the
playback head
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What was the purpose of the 300-msec tone in the experiment?
To start a timer for measuring
reaction time
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What was the outcome of the analysis of variance in the results?
There was a
significant effect
of distinctive features and an
interaction
with syllable position
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What were the distinctive feature conditions in the study?
One distinctive feature change
Two
distinctive feature changes
Four
distinctive feature changes
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What were the results of mispronunciation detection based on distinctive features?
Fewer than
30%
detected with one feature change
60%
detected with two feature changes
75%
detected with
four feature changes
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What was the procedure for presenting the stimulus material?
Recorded by a male speaker
Identical tapes with varying
mispronunciations
Subjects
instructed to press a button for mispronunciations
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What were the characteristics of the mispronounced words used in the study?
Selected from
Lewis Carroll's
"Through the Looking Glass"
Each word was
three
syllables
Mispronounced by changing a consonant
phoneme
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What is the title of the article discussed in the study material?
Tracking the Time Course of Spoken Word Recognition Using Eye Movements
: Evidence for
Continuous Mapping Models
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What was the significance of the syllable position in mispronunciations?
Mispronunciations occurred equally in first, second, or third syllables
First syllable changes involved the
first phoneme
Second and third syllable changes involved the
final phoneme
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Who are the authors of the article?
Paul D. Allopenna
,
James S. Magnuson
, and
Michael K. Tanenhaus
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What was the role of the distinctive feature system in the study?
Valid measure of perceptual similarity of
phonemes
Used to determine
mispronunciation detection
Guided the phonemic changes in the
experiment
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What was monitored as participants followed spoken instructions?
Eye movements
to pictures of four objects on a screen
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What were the results of the study regarding phoneme detection?
Subjects
detected fewer
mispronunciations
with one
feature
change
More mispronunciations detected with two and four feature changes
Reaction times
varied based on
syllable
position
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What were the implications of the study's findings?
Supports the
notion
that words are identified by distinctive features
Suggests
phonemes
can be perceived in parallel
Indicates listeners can fill in missing phonemes based on context
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What type of spoken instruction was given in Experiment 1?
Instructions to move one of the objects, e.g., "Pick up the
beaker
; now put it below the
diamond
"
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What were the limitations of the study?
Only
undergraduate
students participated
Limited to English speakers
Focused on
specific
phoneme changes
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What types of distractor objects were included in the experiments?
A cohort
competitor
, a rhyme
competitor
, and an unrelated competitor
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What future research directions could stem from this study?
Investigating other languages and dialects
Exploring the effects of
background noise
on
phoneme
detection
Examining the role of
context
in speech perception
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