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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 15, 2025

Foreign Accent and Forensic Speaker Identification in Voice Lineups: The Influence of Acoustic Features Based on Prosody
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Foreign Accent and Forensic Speaker Identification in Voice Lineups: The Influence of Acoustic Features Based on Prosody

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Prosodic cues to word boundaries in a segmentation task assessed using reverse correlation.

Alejandro Osses1, Elsa Spinelli2, Fanny Meunier3

  • 1Laboratoire des Systèmes Perceptifs, Département d'Études Cognitives, École Normale Supérieure, PSL University, CNRS, Paris, France.

JASA Express Letters
|September 27, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Listeners use speech sound cues to identify word boundaries. This study reveals that pitch contour (f0) rise and vowel length at the start of content words are key segmentation cues.

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Area of Science:

  • Psycholinguistics
  • Speech Perception
  • Auditory Neuroscience

Background:

  • Listeners utilize acoustic cues to segment continuous speech into words.
  • Traditional methods involve direct manipulation of hypothesized segmentation features.
  • A novel approach using reverse correlation minimizes assumptions about relevant acoustic features.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate acoustic segmentation cues in speech perception using a data-driven method.
  • To identify which prosodic features contribute to word boundary perception.
  • To evaluate the efficacy of reverse correlation in speech segmentation research.

Main Methods:

  • Employed reverse correlation to analyze perception of word boundaries.
  • Used phonemically identical French sentence pairs with manipulated prosody.
  • Introduced random fundamental frequency (f0) trajectories and segment durations as stimuli.

Main Results:

  • The study identified significant perceptual roles for specific acoustic features.
  • A rising fundamental frequency (f0) contour at the beginning of content words was a key cue.
  • Increased vowel duration at the beginning of content words also played a prominent role.

Conclusions:

  • Reverse correlation provides a valuable, assumption-light method for studying speech perception.
  • Prosodic features, specifically f0 rise and vowel duration, are crucial for identifying word boundaries in French.
  • These findings advance our understanding of how the brain processes spoken language segmentation.