Jove
Visualize
Contact Us
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Related Experiment Videos

The stop/glide boundary shift: modelling perceptual data.

D K Oller1, R E Eilers, E Miskiel

  • 1University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla.

Phonetica
|January 1, 1991
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Related Concept Videos

You might also read

Related Articles

Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.

Sort by
Same author

Modeling gait score of broiler chicken via production and behavioral data.

Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience·2022
Same author

Intramedullary, periosteal, and extraskeletal Ewing sarcomas: retrospective study of a series of 126 cases in a reference center.

Skeletal radiology·2022
Same author

Dactylitis: A pictorial review of key symptoms.

Diagnostic and interventional imaging·2020
Same author

Anaesthetic management of postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome presenting during pregnancy.

International journal of obstetric anesthesia·2019
Same author

Direct isotopic evidence of biogenic methane production and efflux from beneath a temperate glacier.

Scientific reports·2018
Same author

Hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia in pregnancy: regional and general anaesthesia.

International journal of obstetric anesthesia·2018
Same journal

Comparing the roles of f0, speech rate, and timbre in expressing and perceiving politeness in Mandarin speech.

Phonetica·2026
Same journal

Speech prosody: from acoustics to interpretation.

Phonetica·2026
Same journal

What determines the success of AI voice-cloned speech? Prosodic and acoustic evidence on three TTS systems.

Phonetica·2026
Same journal

The effects of native phonotactic experience, cross-language perceptual similarity, and non-native phonological merger on Mandarin speakers' perception of Cantonese syllable-final segments.

Phonetica·2026
Same journal

Variation and change in the production of te reo Māori closing vowel sequences.

Phonetica·2026
Same journal

Overcoming stress deafness: the interplay of musical acuity and L2 proficiency in Czech learners' perception of English stress.

Phonetica·2026
See all related articles

Listeners adjust speech perception based on context. The stop/glide boundary shift, influenced by syllable duration, is explored, with findings supporting the durational contrast hypothesis for speech perception.

Area of Science:

  • * Phonetics and psychoacoustics
  • * Auditory perception and speech processing

Background:

  • * Listeners adjust speech category boundaries based on context.
  • * The stop/glide boundary shift with syllable duration is debated, with explanations including rate normalization and auditory factors.

Purpose of the Study:

  • * To clarify the causes and effects of the stop/glide boundary shift.
  • * To investigate variations in the shift across different experimental conditions.
  • * To test the durational contrast hypothesis in speech perception.

Main Methods:

  • * Experimentation involving varying stimulus patterns and presentation formats (mixed vs. blocked).
  • * Exploration of stop/glide boundary locations using identification and discrimination paradigms.
  • * Analysis of the nonlinear characteristics of the perceptual shift.

Related Experiment Videos

Main Results:

  • * The stop/glide shift is not an artifact of previous stimulus patterns.
  • * The identification shift exhibits nonlinear characteristics.
  • * Presentation format significantly influences the identification shift.
  • * Boundary locations varied across different discrimination paradigms.

Conclusions:

  • * Findings support expanded versions of the durational contrast hypothesis.
  • * The shift may result from contrastive perception of events with comparable durations.
  • * Alternatively, the shift could represent a perceptual error in tracking changing frequency trajectories.