2002
DOI: 10.1121/1.4778352
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Relative roles of consonants and vowels in perceiving phonetic versus talker cues in speech

Abstract: Perceptual experiments tested whether consonants and vowels differentially contribute to phonetic versus indexical cueing in speech. In 2 experiments, 62 total participants each heard 128 American–English word pairs recorded by 8 male and 8 female talkers. Half the pairs were synonyms, while half were nonsynonyms. Further, half the pairs were words from the same talker, and half from different, same-sex talkers. The first word heard was unaltered, while the second was edited by setting either all vowels (‘‘Con… Show more

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