Long-Term Memory in Speech Perception: Some New Findings on Talker Variability, Speaking Rate and Perceptual Learning
Author: David B. Pisoni
Abstract:
This chapter summarizes results from recent studies on the role of long-term
memory in speech perception and spoken word recognition. Experiments on
talker variability, speaking rate and perceptual learning provide evidence
of implicit memory for very fine perceptual details of speech. Listeners
apparently encode specific attributes of the talker's voice and speaking
rate into long-term memory. Acoustic-phonetic variability does not appear
to be "lost" as a result of phonetic analysis. The process of
"perceptual normalization" in speech perception may therefore
entail encoding of specific instances or "episodes" of the stimulus
input and the operations used in perceptual analysis. These perceptual operations
may reside in a "procedural memory" for a specific talker's voice.
Taken together, the present set of findings are consistent with non-analytic
accounts of perception, memory and cognition which emphasize the contribution
of episodic or exemplar-based encoding in long-term memory. The results
from these studies also raise questions about the traditional dissociation
in phonetics between the linguistic and indexical properties of speech.
Listeners apparently retain non-linguistic information in long-term memory
about the speaker's gender, dialect, speaking rate and emotional state,
attributes of speech signals that are not traditionally considered part
of phonetic or lexical representations of words. These properties influence
the initial perceptual encoding and retention of spoken words and therefore
should play an important role in theoretical accounts of how the nervous
system maps speech signals onto linguistic representations in the mental
lexicon.