Abstract
Experiments were conducted to determine the underlying resolving power of the auditory system for temporal changes at the onset of speech and nonspeech stimuli. Stimulus sets included a bilabial VOT continuum and an analogous nonspeech continuum similar to the "noise-buzz" stimuli used by Miller et al. [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 60, 410-417 (1976)]. The main difference between these and earlier experiments was that efforts were made to minimize both the trial-to-trial stimulus uncertainty and the cognitive load inherent in some of the testing procedures. Under conditions of minimal psychophysical uncertainty, not only does discrimination performance improve overall, but the local maximum, usually interpreted as evidence of categorical perception, is eliminated. Instead, discrimination performance for voice onset time (VOT) or noise lead time (NLT) is very accurate for short onset times and generally decreases with increasing onset time. This result suggests that "categorization" of familiar sounds is not the result of a psychoacoustic threshold (as Miller et al. have suggested) but rather of processing at a more central level of the auditory system.
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