Publication - Unattended exposure to components of speech sounds yields same benefits as explicit auditory training
RESEARCH

Unattended exposure to components of speech sounds yields same benefits as explicit auditory training

Research Area:  
    
Type:  
Journal article

 

Year: 2010
Authors: Aaron Seitz; Athanassios Protopapas; Yoshiaki Tsushima; Eleni Vlahou; Simone Gori; Stephen Grossberg; Takeo Watanabe
Journal: Cognition
Volume: 115
Number: 3
Pages: 435-443
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2010.03.004
Abstract:
Learning a second language as an adult is particularly effortful when new phonetic representations must be formed. Therefore the processes that allow learning of speech sounds are of great theoretical and practical interest. Here we examined whether perception of single formant transitions, that is, sound components critical in speech perception, can be enhanced through an implicit task-irrelevant learning procedure that has been shown to produce visual perceptual learning. The single-formant sounds were paired at subthreshold levels with the attended targets in an auditory identification task. Results showed that task-irrelevant learning occurred for the unattended stimuli. Surprisingly, the magnitude of this learning effect was similar to that following explicit training on auditory formant transition detection using discriminable stimuli in an adaptive procedure, whereas explicit training on the subthreshold stimuli produced no learning. These results suggest that in adults learning of speech parts can occur at least partially through implicit mechanisms.
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