Abstract
Six- to seven-month-old infants were tested on their ability to discriminate among three speech sounds which differed on the basis of formant-transition duration, a major cue to distinctions among stop, semivowel and diphthong classes. The three speech sounds, [see text] were produced in two different ways. The stimuli for one experiment were two-formant synthetic tokens which differed in formant-transition duration. The stimuli for a second experiment was produced with a computer-modification technique which artificially shortened or lengthened the formant-transition portion of a naturally produced [see text], resulting in tokens of [see text]. The discrimination procedure involved visual reinforcement of a head-turn response following a change from a repeating background stimulus to a contrasting stimulus. Infants in both experiments discriminated [see text]; evidence for [see text] discrimination was obtained for the "computer modified" tokens only. These findings are discussed in terms of possible mechanisms underlying speech perception in infancy.
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