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Related Experiment Videos

Depolarizing the perceptual magnet effect

A J Lotto1, K R Kluender, L L Holt

  • 1Department of Psychology, Loyola University Chicago, Illinois 60626, USA. alotto@luc.edu

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
|June 24, 1998
PubMed
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The Perceptual-Magnet Effect (PME) may not be a distinct phenomenon. Our findings suggest that speech sound perception is explained by general principles of categorical perception, not special magnet effects.

Area of Science:

  • Psycholinguistics
  • Speech Perception
  • Auditory Neuroscience

Background:

  • The Perceptual-Magnet Effect (PME) is a proposed phenomenon where speech sound perception within a category is influenced by phonetic "goodness."
  • Existing studies often use AX-discrimination tasks, but category membership is determined by isolated sound identification, potentially confounding results.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether the Perceptual-Magnet Effect (PME) is a necessary explanation for speech sound perception.
  • To determine if classic Categorical Perception tenets can account for observed discriminability patterns.

Main Methods:

  • Experiment 1: Assessed identification and goodness judgments of vowel pairs (/i/-/e/) within varying contexts.
  • Experiment 2: Conducted AX-discrimination tasks using the same vowel pairs.

Related Experiment Videos

  • Calculated predictions of discriminability based on contextual identification functions from Experiment 1.
  • Main Results:

    • Phonetic identity of vowels shifted significantly based on the context vowel.
    • Discriminability functions obtained in Experiment 2 were accurately predicted by the identification functions from Experiment 1.
    • No unexplained variance necessitated the proposal of "perceptual magnets."

    Conclusions:

    • The Perceptual-Magnet Effect (PME) may not require unique explanatory mechanisms beyond general Categorical Perception.
    • Observed effects in speech sound discrimination can be explained by established principles of how listeners categorize stimuli.
    • Discriminability is consistently greater for cross-category stimulus pairs than for within-category pairs.