Adaptation in Speech Motor Control
Houde, John F., Jordan, Michael I.
–Neural Information Processing Systems
Human subjects are known to adapt their motor behavior to a shift of the visual field brought about by wearing prism glasses over their eyes. We have studied the analog of this effect in speech. U sing a device that can feed back transformed speech signals in real time, we exposed subjects to alterations of their own speech feedback. We found that speakers learn to adjust their production of a vowel to compensate for feedback alterations that change the vowel's perceived phonetic identity; moreover, the effect generalizes across consonant contexts and to different vowels. 1 INTRODUCTION For more than a century, it has been know that humans will adapt their reaches to altered visual feedback [8]. One of the most studied examples of this adaptation is prism adaptation, which is seen when a subject reaches to targets while wearing image-shifting prism glasses [2]. Initially, the subject misses the targets, but he soon learns to compensate and reach accurately.
Neural Information Processing Systems
Dec-31-1998
- Country:
- North America > United States
- New York (0.14)
- Massachusetts > Middlesex County
- Cambridge (0.15)
- California > San Francisco County
- San Francisco (0.14)
- North America > United States
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.70)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence
- Cognitive Science (0.42)
- Speech (0.34)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence