Within certain auditory patterns, fainter sounds may be "heard" clearly when replaced by louder sounds having appropriate spectral compositions. This auditory induction of fainter by louder sounds can cancel the perceptual effects of masking. Phonemic restorations, which have been reported previously, appear to be a specialized application to speech of the much broader phenomenon of auditory induction. The rules governing auditory induction indicate that it helps maintain stable auditory perception in our frequently noisy environment.
Accurate perception of temporal order is essential for many auditory tasks. Yet the temporal pattern of four successive sounds (for example, hisses, buzzes, and tones) could not be recognized even when the duration of each sound was considerably longer than either the average phoneme in normal discourse or the notes of melodies. Although each of the stimuli was perceived, their order remained frustratingly elusive.
When a speech sound in a sentence is replaced completely by an extraneous sound (such as a cough or tone), the listener restores the missing sound on the bases of both prior and subsequent context. This illusory effect, called phonemic restoration (PhR), causes the physically absent phoneme to seem as real as the speech sounds which are present. The extraneous sound seems to occur along with other phonemes without interfering with their clarity. But if a silent gap (rather than an extraneous sound) replaces the same phoneme, the interruption in the sentence is more readily localized in its true position and PhRs occurs less frequently. Quantitative measures were taken both of the incidence of PhRs and of the direction and extent of temporal mislocalizations of interruptions for several related stimuli under a variety of experimental conditions. The results were connected with other auditory illusions and temporal confusions reported in the literature, and suggestions were made concerning mechanisms employed normally for verbal organization.
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