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Acoustic context effects, where surrounding changes in pitch, rate or timbre influence the perception of a sound, are well documented in speech perception, but how they interact with lan- guage background remains unclear. Using a reverse-correlation approach, we systematically varied the pitch and speech rate in phrases around different pairs of vowels for second language (L2) speakers of English (/i/-/I/) and French (/u/-/y/), thus reconstructing, in a data-driven manner, the prosodic profiles that bias their perception. Testing English and French speakers (n=25), we showed that vowel perception is in fact influenced by conflicting effects from the surrounding pitch and speech rate: a congruent proximal effect 0.2s pre-target and a distal contrastive effect up to 1s before; and found that L1 and L2 speakers exhibited strikingly similar prosodic profiles in perception. We provide a novel method to investigate acoustic context effects across stimuli, timescales, and acoustic domain.
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Paige Tuttösí
Total (France)
H. Henny Yeung
Simon Fraser University
Yue Wang
Central China Normal University
Simon Fraser University
Franche-Comté Électronique Mécanique Thermique et Optique - Sciences et Technologies
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Tuttösí et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e59e92b6db643587538b0f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.21437/interspeech.2024-1296