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Journal article

A cross-language study of compensation in response to real-time formant perturbation

From

Queen's University Kingston1

Hearing Systems, Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark2

Department of Electrical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark3

Western University4

Past studies have shown that when formants are perturbed in real time, speakers spontaneously compensate for the perturbation by changing their formant frequencies in the opposite direction to the perturbation. Further, the pattern of these results suggests that the processing of auditory feedback error operates at a purely acoustic level.

This hypothesis was tested by comparing the response of three language groups to real-time formant perturbations, (1) native English speakers producing an English vowel /e/, (2) native Japanese speakers producing a Japanese vowel (=e<=), and (3) native Japanese speakers learning English, producing /e/.

All three groups showed similar production patterns when F1 was decreased; however, when F1 was increased, the Japanese groups did not compensate as much as the native English speakers. Due to this asymmetry, the hypothesis that the compensatory production for formant perturbation operates at a purely acoustic level was rejected.

Rather, some level of phonological processing influences the feedback processing behavior.

Language: English
Publisher: Acoustical Society of America
Year: 2011
Pages: 2978-2986
ISSN: 01630962 , 00014966 and 15208524
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1121/1.3643826
ORCIDs: MacDonald, Ewen

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