Models of Speech Processing
Date
2015-01-01Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
One of the fundamental questions about language is how listeners map the acoustic signal onto
syllables, words, and sentences, resulting in understanding of speech. For normal listeners, this
mapping is so effortless that one rarely stops to consider just how it takes place. However, studies
of speech have shown that this acoustic signal contains a great deal of underlying complexity.
A number of competing models seek to explain how these intricate processes work. Such models
have often narrowed the problem to mapping the speech signal onto isolated words, setting aside
the complexity of segmenting continuous speech. Continuous speech has presented a significant
challenge for many models because of the high variability of the signal and the difficulties involved
in resolving the signal into individual words.
The importance of understanding speech becomes particularly apparent when neurological
disease affects this seemingly basic ability. Lesion studies have explored impairments of speech
sound processing to determine whether deficits occur in perceptual analysis of acoustic-phonetic
information or in stored abstract phonological representations (e.g., Basso, Casati,& Vignolo, 1977;
Blumstein, Cooper, Zurif,& Caramazza, 1977). Furthermore, researchers have attempted to determine
in what ways underlying phonological/phonetic impairments may contribute to auditory
comprehension deficits (Blumstein, Baker, & Goodglass, 1977).
In this chapter, we discuss several psycholinguistic models of word recognition (the process of
mapping the speech signal onto the lexicon), and outline how components of such models might
correspond to the functional anatomy of the brain. We will also relate evidence from brain lesion
and brain activation studies to components of such models. We then present some approaches that
deal with speech perception more generally, and touch on a few current topics of debate.
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/5220Collections
- English Literature & Linguistics [103 items ]