Changing sounds are key to understanding speech

June 22, 2010 by Chris Barncard

(PhysOrg.com) -- On the printed page, c*ns*n*nts m*tt*r m*r* th*n v*w*ls.

But for spoken words, it may not be as simple as vowels versus consonants, according to University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers. When you're listening, consonants or vowels take a back seat to the way your cochlea wiggles.

"Plenty of studies have examined whether consonants or vowels are more important to the listener," says Christian Stilp, graduate student in psychology at UW-Madison. "Opposite the pattern for reading, researchers often found that consonants were more expendable when understanding speech."

Bully for vowels? Not quite.

The findings get messy when transitions from vowel to consonant and consonant to vowel are considered. In spoken phrases, are not like beads on a string. Their tonal colors intermingle, and the resulting mixture proves just as important to listeners as vowel sounds.

To Stilp and Keith Kluender — UW-Madison psychology professor and co-author with Stilp on a study published in — it appeared researchers were missing something.

"We decided to try to make it simpler," Stilp says. "Let's stop thinking in terms of consonants and vowels altogether. Let's think about ears instead of language."

Stilp and Kluender developed a measure of change from one in a sentence to the next based on the way they are translated into in the cochlea, a small structure inside the ear that changes sound into signals to the brain. Called cochlea-scaled entropy, the metric highlights sounds that matter most to the brain.

"We tried to make this realistic — biologically plausible, like what is actually going on as sound travels up your auditory nerves and into your brain," Stilp says. "What do neurons like? They register change. They say, 'Wake me when something new happens.'"

By considering very brief changes across and frequency that make sound-handling neurons fire more often and easily, Stilp and Kluender targeted pieces of test sentences that have small, moderate and large changes. In turn, they cut the sections at each level of change out, replacing them with noise and playing the sentences for listeners in their lab.

The more change was replaced with noise, the harder it was for people to understand the sentences.

"When we replace intervals of low change with noise, you're still pretty good at understanding the sentence," Stilp says. "But intelligibility keeps going down as we replace intervals of higher change with noise."

Intelligibility dropped by about a third as sounds with greater change were removed. Circling back to compare the sounds marked as important by cochlea-scaled entropy revealed its superiority to simple vowel-consonant divisions.

"Vowels were replaced more often, but they weren't a good predictor," Stilp says. "It wasn't a reliable way to predict intelligibility, which CSE did beautifully."

Most likely to rate as high-change sounds are "low" vowels, sounds like "ah" in "father" or "top" that draw the jaw and tongue downward. Least likely to cause much change are "stop" consonants like "t" and "d" in "today."

The spread of sounds in between did a nice job, Stilp said, describing the hierarchy of sounds known to linguists as sonority. Sonority helps to explain how syllables are put together in nearly every language in the world.

"There have been lots of attempts to measure sonority that didn't come up with a satisfactory answer," Stilp says. "From the way this turned out, we seemed to measure sonority pretty well. We're interested to see if linguists and phoneticians find this useful in their studies of language."

Provided by University of Wisconsin-Madison (news : web)

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gmurphy
Jun 23, 2010

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An outstanding study, does this mean we have another subset of phonemes based on tonal transitions which constitute the true basis set of our language comprehension?
RobertKarlStonjek
Jun 25, 2010

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On the printed page, consonants mutter mere thin vowels?
Or could it be that there is only one possible word that fits the missing vowels in v*w*ls but hundreds of words that fit *o*e** or could it be that in the mystery sentence there are 10 vowels but 20 consonants, so guessing is much easier if the vowels are missing but near impossible if the consonants are missing (because twice as much of the word is missing and there is around 10~100 times as many possible fits for each word) ???
Rank 5 /5 (4 votes)
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