Effects of Short- and Long-Term Changes in Auditory Feedback on Vowel and Sibilant Contrasts

Author:

Lane Harlan1,Matthies Melanie L.2,Guenther Frank H.2,Denny Margaret3,Perkell Joseph S.4,Stockmann Ellen3,Tiede Mark5,Vick Jennell6,Zandipour Majid4

Affiliation:

1. Northeastern University, Boston, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge

2. Boston University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology

3. Massachusetts Institute of Technology

4. Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Boston University

5. Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Haskins Laboratories, New Haven, CT

6. University of Washington, Seattle, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Abstract

Purpose To assess the effects of short- and long-term changes in auditory feedback on vowel and sibilant contrasts and to evaluate hypotheses arising from a model of speech motor planning. Method The perception and production of vowel and sibilant contrasts were measured in 8 postlingually deafened adults prior to activation of their cochlear implant speech processors, 1 month postactivation, and 1 year postactivation. Measures were taken postactivation both with and without auditory feedback. Contrast measures were also made for a group of speakers with reportedly normal hearing speaking with masked and unmasked auditory feedback. Results Vowel and sibilant contrasts, measured in the absence of auditory feedback after 1 month of prosthesis use, were diminished compared with their values measured before prosthesis. Contrasts measured in the absence of auditory feedback after 1 year’s experience with the prosthesis were increased compared with their values after 1 month’s experience. In both time samples, contrasts were enhanced when auditory feedback was restored. Conclusion The provision of prosthetic hearing to postlingually deafened adults impaired their phonemic contrasts at first, as their auditory feedback had novel characteristics. Once auditory feedback became recalibrated with prosthesis use, it could, in turn, revise feedforward commands that control the contrasts in its absence.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference65 articles.

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2. Formant trajectories as audible gestures: An alternative for speech synthesis;Bailly G.;Journal of Phonetics,1991

3. The development of speech adaptation to an artificial palate

4. Vowel and consonant recognition of cochlear implant patients using formant-estimating speech processors;Blamey P. J.;The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America,1987

5. Voice F0 responses to manipulations in pitch feedback

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