posted on 2004-08-01, 00:00authored byDaniel Mirman, Lori HoltLori Holt, James L McClelland
Different patterns of performance across vowels and consonants in tests of categorization and
discrimination indicate that vowels tend to be perceived more continuously, or less categorically,
than consonants. The present experiments examined whether analogous differences in perception
would arise in nonspeech sounds that share critical transient acoustic cues of consonants and
steady-state spectral cues of simplified synthetic vowels. Listeners were trained to categorize novel
nonspeech sounds varying along a continuum defined by a steady-state cue, a rapidly-changing cue,
or both cues. Listeners’ categorization of stimuli varying on the rapidly changing cue showed a
sharp category boundary and posttraining discrimination was well predicted from the assumption of
categorical perception. Listeners more accurately discriminated but less accurately categorized
steady-state nonspeech stimuli. When listeners categorized stimuli defined by both rapidly-changing
and steady-state cues, discrimination performance was accurate and the categorization function
exhibited a sharp boundary. These data are similar to those found in experiments with dynamic
vowels, which are defined by both steady-state and rapidly-changing acoustic cues. A general
account for the speech and nonspeech patterns is proposed based on the supposition that the
perceptual trace of rapidly-changing sounds decays faster than the trace of steady-state sounds.