Abstract

The perceptual effects of orthogonal variations in two acoustic parameters which differentiate American English prevocalic /r/ and /l/ were examined. A spectral cue (frequency onset and transition of F2 and F3) and a temporal cue (relative duration of initial steady state and transition of F1) were varied in synthetic versions of "rock" and "lock." Four temporal variations in each of ten stimuli of a spectral-cue continuum were generated. Phonetic identification and oddity discrimination tasks with the four series showed systematic displacement of perceptual boundaries and discrimination peaks, thus reflecting a trading relation between the two cues. The perceptual equivalence of spectral and temporal cues was investigated by comparing the accuracy of discrimination of three types of stimulus comparisons: phonetically facilitating two-cue pairs, one-cue pairs, and phonetically conflicting two-cue pairs. As predicted, discrimination accuracy was ordered: Facilitating cues greater than one-cue greater than conflicting cues, indicating that perceivers discriminated on the basis of an integrated phonetic percept.

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