Sensorimotor adaptation to a non-uniform formant perturbation generalizes to untrained vowels

When speakers learn to change the way they produce a speech sound, how much does that learning generalize to other speech sounds? Past studies of speech sensorimotor learning have typically tested the generalization of a single transformation learned in a single context. Here, we investigate the abi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of neurophysiology
Main Authors Parrell, Benjamin, Niziolek, Caroline A, Chen, Taijing
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 02.10.2024
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Summary:When speakers learn to change the way they produce a speech sound, how much does that learning generalize to other speech sounds? Past studies of speech sensorimotor learning have typically tested the generalization of a single transformation learned in a single context. Here, we investigate the ability of the speech motor system to generalize learning when multiple opposing sensorimotor transformations are learned in separate regions of the vowel space. We find that speakers adapt to a non-uniform "centralization" perturbation, learning to produce vowels with greater acoustic contrast, and that this adaptation generalizes to untrained vowels, which pattern like neighboring trained vowels and show increased contrast of a similar magnitude.
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ISSN:0022-3077
1522-1598
1522-1598
DOI:10.1152/jn.00240.2024