Stockholm university

Research project Using rational models to interpret results of experiments in speech perception.

Exposure to unfamiliar non-native speech tends to improve comprehension. One hypothesis holds that listeners adapt to non-native-accented speech through distributional learning—by inferring the statistics of the talker’s phonetic cues. Models based on this hypothesis provide a good fit to incremental changes after exposure to atypical native speech. These models have, however, not previously been appliedto non-native accents, which typically differ from native speech in many dimensions.

Motivated by a seeming failure to replicate a well-replicated finding from accent adaptation, we use ideal observers to test whether our results can be understood solely based on the statistics of the relevant cue distributions in the native- and non-native-accented speech. The simple computational model we use for this purpose can be used predictively by other researchers working on similar questions. All code and data are shared.

 

Project members

Project managers

Maryann Su Lin Tan

Doktorand

The Department of Swedish Language and Multilingualism
MT

Members

T Florian Jaeger

University of Rochester, NY, USA, Dept. of Brain & Cognitive Sciences, Dept. of Computer Science

Xin Xie

Assistant Professor

University of California, Irvine, CA, USA, Department of Language Science Wordmark