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Patterns of covert speech behavior and phonetic coding.

F J McGuigan1, A B Dollins

  • 1Institute for Stress Management, United States International University, San Diego, CA 92131.

The Pavlovian Journal of Biological Science
|January 1, 1989
PubMed
Summary
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Covert speech muscles activate for specific phonemes. Lip muscles respond to "P," while tongue muscles activate for "T," demonstrating systematic neuromuscular patterns during speech processing.

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Speech Science
  • Linguistics

Background:

  • Previous studies linked covert speech behavior to phonemic systems in continuous speech.
  • The current research aimed to analyze specific neuromuscular patterns for individual phonemes.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To identify and pinpoint covert neuromuscular speech patterns associated with processing distinct phonemes.
  • To investigate the relationship between visual phoneme processing and muscle activity.

Main Methods:

  • Electromyographic (EMG) recording was used to measure muscle activity.
  • Participants visually processed specific phonemes (e.g., "P," "T") and a control stimulus (C).
  • Lip and tongue muscle activity was analyzed during visual processing tasks.

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Main Results:

  • Significant lip muscle activity was observed when processing the phoneme "P" (bilabial).
  • Significant tongue muscle activity was observed when processing the phoneme "T" (lingual-alveolar).
  • Neither lip nor tongue muscles showed significant activity for the control stimulus or the non-target phoneme.

Conclusions:

  • Speech musculature exhibits systematic, covert responses based on the class of phoneme being processed.
  • These findings support a model where semantic processing involves interactions between speech musculature and linguistic brain regions.
  • Phonetic coding is generated and transmitted via neuromuscular circuits with cybernetic properties during speech understanding.