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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 12, 2026

A Method to Study Adaptation to Left-Right Reversed Audition
07:14

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Published on: October 29, 2018

Context-conditioned generalization in adaptation to distorted speech.

Delphine Dahan1, Rebecca L Mead

  • 1Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, 3401 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA. dahan@psych.upenn.edu

Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance
|June 3, 2010
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Adults can learn to understand distorted speech by generalizing training. Understanding improves when new speech sounds are similar to learned ones, suggesting language experience aids auditory learning.

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Area of Science:

  • Auditory Perception
  • Speech Processing
  • Cognitive Psychology

Background:

  • Understanding distorted speech is crucial for effective communication.
  • Previous research explored auditory learning but generalization in speech remains complex.
  • The role of linguistic experience in decoding degraded auditory signals needs further investigation.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the extent and conditions of generalization in learning to decode noise-vocoded speech.
  • To determine how stimulus similarity and linguistic experience influence generalization.
  • To explore the cognitive mechanisms underlying auditory learning for speech perception.

Main Methods:

  • Participants were trained to decode monosyllabic speech stimuli presented in both distorted and unaltered forms.
  • Generalization was tested using novel stimuli with varying degrees of similarity to training stimuli.
  • Training conditions included using real words versus nonsense strings to assess the impact of linguistic knowledge.

Main Results:

  • Listeners demonstrated successful generalization of learned decoding skills to new stimuli.
  • Generalization was significantly influenced by the phonetic and positional similarity between training and testing stimuli.
  • Training with real words led to greater generalization compared to training with nonsense strings.

Conclusions:

  • Adults can generalize auditory learning for speech perception, with generalization effectiveness dependent on stimulus overlap.
  • Linguistic experience, such as training with meaningful words, enhances the ability to generalize speech decoding.
  • The process of learning to interpret distorted speech involves building phonological categories influenced by ambient language structure.