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Preperceptual images, processing time, and perceptual units in auditory perception.
330
Citations
81
References
1972
Year
PsychoacousticsAuditory ImageryAuditory CortexPsycholinguisticsSpeech RecognitionAudio AnalysisPsychophysicsHealth SciencesAuditory ProcessingSynthesis ProcessCognitive ScienceAuditory ModelingCognitive Hearing ScienceArtsAuditory ResearchPrimary Recognition ProcessSpeech TechnologyPreperceptual ImagesHearing PerceptionSpeech ProcessingNeurosciencePrimary RecognitionSpeech PerceptionAuditory SystemAuditory Neuroscience
Speech recognition transforms preperceptual auditory images of sound‑pressure fluctuations into perceptual units through a primary synthesis process. This chapter examines the temporal course of the primary recognition/synthesis process and presents a schematic information‑processing model. The model assumes a preperceptual auditory image stores stimulus information until primary recognition, then matches this image to long‑term memory descriptions, transforming it into a synthesized percept.
Publisher Summary The primary recognition process represents a synthesis of the preperceptual representation of these speech sounds. This chapter focuses on the temporal course of the primary recognition or synthesis process. It presents a schematic representation of the primary recognition process in the framework of an information-processing model. This representation of the recognition process rests on certain assumptions about the structure and function of the human information-processing system: (1) the preperceptual auditory image holds information about the stimulus and this information remain there until primary recognition has occurred, and (2) a description of this stimulus information is available in long-term memory so that recognition can occur. The primary recognition process finds the best match between the preperceptual image and the description in long-term memory. Recognition of the stimulus involves a transformation of the information in the preperceptual auditory image, resulting in a synthesized percept of the stimulus. The stimulus for recognizing speech is a sound pattern that can be described by fluctuations in sound pressure over time.
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