The Handbook of Speech Perception. Группа авторов
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Table of Contents
1 Cover
6 Foreword to the Second Edition
7 Foreword to the First Edition
8 Preface
9 Part I: Sensing Speech 1 Perceptual Organization of Speech Perceptual organization and the gestalt legacy The plausibility of the generic account of perceptual organization The perceptual organization of speech Implications of perceptual organization for theories of speech perception Conclusion Acknowledgments REFERENCES 2 Primacy of Multimodal Speech Perception for the Brain and Science Ubiquity and automaticity of multisensory speech The double‐edged sword of the McGurk effect Multimodal speech is integrated at the earliest observable stage Supramodal speech information Specific examples of supramodal information General examples of supramodal information Conclusions REFERENCES 3 How Does the Brain Represent Speech? Introduction Encoding of speech in the inner ear and auditory nerve Subcortical pathways Primary auditory cortex What does the higher‐order cortex add? Systems‐level representations and temporal prediction Semantic representations Conclusion REFERENCES 4 Perceptual Control of Speech Perceptual feedback processing Models of feedback processing Auditory feedback and vocal learning Perception–production interaction Conclusion REFERENCES
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Part II: Perception of Linguistic Properties
5 Features in Speech Perception and Lexical Access
Preliminaries
Feature dimensions
Features: Binary or graded
Feature representations: Articulatory or acoustic
Conclusion
REFERENCES
6 Speaker Normalization in Speech Perception
Introduction
Physiological and acoustic differences between talkers
The vowel‐normalization problem
Intrinsic normalization
Extrinsic normalization
Conclusions
REFERENCES
7 Clear Speech Perception: Linguistic and Cognitive Benefits
Characteristics of clear speech production and their effect on linguistic and cognitive processes
Variability in CS production
Variability in CS perception
Conclusion
REFERENCES
8 A Comprehensive Approach to Specificity Effects in Spoken‐Word Recognition
Comprehensive approach
Theoretical frameworks
Final thoughts
Acknowledgments
REFERENCES
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