Semi-supervised Phonetic Category Learning: Does Word-level Information Enhance the Efficacy of Distributional Learning?

To test whether word-level information facilitates the learning of phonetic categories, 40 adult native English speakers were exposed to a bimodal distribution of vowels embedded in non-words. Half of the subjects received phonetic categories aligned with lexical categories, while the other half rec...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of European psychology students Vol. 5; no. 3; pp. 36 - 45
Main Authors Poppels, Till, Swingley, Daniel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ubiquity Press Ltd 22.08.2014
European Federation of Psychology Students' Associations
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:To test whether word-level information facilitates the learning of phonetic categories, 40 adult native English speakers were exposed to a bimodal distribution of vowels embedded in non-words. Half of the subjects received phonetic categories aligned with lexical categories, while the other half received no such cue. It was hypothesized that the subjects exposed to lexically-informative training stimuli that were aligned with the target categories would outperform the control subjects on a perceptual categorization task after training. While the results revealed no such group differences, the data indicated that many subjects used the relevant dimension for categorization before having received any training. Implications regarding experimental design and suggestions for future research based on the results are discussed. Keywords: phonetic category acquisition, distributional learning, semi-supervised learning
ISSN:2222-6931
2222-6931
DOI:10.5334/jeps.ce