Implicit and explicit categorization of speech sounds--dissociating behavioural and neurophysiological data.

Bien H, Lagemann L, Dobel C, Zwitserlood P

Forschungsartikel (Zeitschrift) | Peer reviewed

Zusammenfassung

During speech perception, sound is mapped onto abstract phonological categories. Assimilation of place or manner of articulation in connected speech challenges this categorization. Does assimilation result in categorizations that need to be corrected later on, or does the system get it right immediately? Participants were presented with isolated nasals (/m/ labial, /n/ alveolar, and /n'/ assimilated towards labial place of articulation), extracted from naturally produced German utterances. Behavioural two-alternative forced-choice tasks showed that participants could correctly categorize the /n/s and /m/s. The assimilated nasals were predominantly categorized as /m/, indicative of a perceived change in place. A pitch variation additively influenced the categorizations. Using magnetoencephalography (MEG), we analysed the N100m elicited by the same stimuli without a categorization task. In sharp contrast to the behavioural data, this early, automatic brain response ignored the assimilation in the surface form and reflected the underlying category. As shown by distributed source modelling, phonemic differences were processed exclusively left-laterally (temporally and parietally), whereas the pitch variation was processed in temporal regions bilaterally. In conclusion, explicit categorization draws attention to the surface form - to the changed place and acoustic information. The N100m reflects automatic categorization, which exploits any hint of an underlying feature.

Details zur Publikation

FachzeitschriftEuropean Journal of Neuroscience (Eur. J. Neurosci.)
Jahrgang / Bandnr. / Volume30
Ausgabe / Heftnr. / Issue2
Seitenbereich339-346
StatusVeröffentlicht
Veröffentlichungsjahr2009
Sprache, in der die Publikation verfasst istEnglisch
DOI10.1111/j.1460-9568.2009.06826.x
StichwörterHumans; Auditory Perception; Male; Young Adult; Adult; Phonetics; Acoustic Stimulation; Choice Behavior; Female; Humans; Auditory Perception; Male; Young Adult; Adult; Phonetics; Acoustic Stimulation; Choice Behavior; Female

Autor*innen der Universität Münster

Bien, Heidrun
Professur für Psycholinguistik und kognitive Neurowissenschaft (Prof. Zwitserlood)
Zwitserlood, Pienie
Professur für Psycholinguistik und kognitive Neurowissenschaft (Prof. Zwitserlood)