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Intonation adaptation to multiple talkers.

Chigusa Kurumada1, Andrés Buxó-Lugo2

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Listeners adapt to speech intonation from multiple talkers, neither strictly by talker nor across talkers. This adaptation helps resolve ambiguity in spoken language comprehension.

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Area of Science:

  • Psycholinguistics
  • Auditory Perception
  • Speech Communication

Background:

  • Speech intonation conveys crucial linguistic and social information, distinguishing utterances like questions from statements.
  • Significant variability in speaking voices creates ambiguity in the meaning-intonation mapping.
  • Prior research indicates listeners adapt to recent speech exposure to resolve ambiguity, but primarily in single-talker contexts.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how listeners adapt to speech intonation patterns when exposed to multiple talkers.
  • To determine if intonation adaptation is talker-dependent, talker-independent, or a combination.

Main Methods:

  • Four experiments exposed listeners to male and/or female talkers producing statements and declarative questions.
  • Listeners categorized utterances from familiar talkers or a novel talker after exposure.
  • Analysis focused on intonation adaptation patterns across different talker combinations.

Main Results:

  • Intonation adaptation was consistently observed across all four experiments.
  • Adaptation was neither strictly talker-dependent nor strictly talker-independent.
  • Listeners tracked individual talker patterns while also showing generalization of adaptation across talkers.

Conclusions:

  • Listener adaptation to speech intonation is complex, involving both talker-specific tracking and cross-talker generalization.
  • Findings suggest adaptation mechanisms are influenced by phonetic contrast and cue distributions, similar to segmental speech perception.
  • This research advances understanding of auditory adaptation in multi-talker speech environments.