posted on 2004-09-01, 00:00authored byLori HoltLori Holt, Andrew J Lotto, Randy L Diehl
Behavioral experiments with infants, adults, and nonhuman animals converge with
neurophysiological findings to suggest that there is a discontinuity in auditory processing of
stimulus components differing in onset time by about 20 ms. This discontinuity has been implicated
as a basis for boundaries between speech categories distinguished by voice onset time (VOT). Here,
it is investigated how this discontinuity interacts with the learning of novel perceptual categories.
Adult listeners were trained to categorize nonspeech stimuli that mimicked certain temporal
properties of VOT stimuli. One group of listeners learned categories with a boundary coincident
with the perceptual discontinuity. Another group learned categories defined such that the perceptual
discontinuity fell within a category. Listeners in the latter group required significantly more
experience to reach criterion categorization performance. Evidence of interactions between the
perceptual discontinuity and the learned categories extended to generalization tests as well. It has
been hypothesized that languages make use of perceptual discontinuities to promote distinctiveness
among sounds within a language inventory. The present data suggest that discontinuities interact
with category learning. As such, ‘‘learnability’’ may play a predictive role in selection of language
sound inventories.