Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/135968
Título: Musical Experience and Speech Processing: The Case of Whistled Words
Autores/as: Tran Ngoc, Anaïs
Meyer, Julien
Meunier, Fanny
Clasificación UNESCO: 5801 Teoría y métodos educativos
620306 Música, musicología
Palabras clave: Knowledge Transfer
Musical Experience
Speech Perception
Whistled Speech
Fecha de publicación: 2024
Publicación seriada: Cognitive Science 
Resumen: In this paper, we explore the effect of musical expertise on whistled word perception by naive listeners. In whistled words of nontonal languages, vowels are transposed to relatively stable pitches, while consonants are translated into pitch movements or interruptions. Previous behavioral studies have demonstrated that naive listeners can categorize isolated consonants, vowels, and words well over chance. Here, we take an interest in the effect of musical experience on words while focusing on specific phonemes within the context of the word. We consider the role of phoneme position and type and compare the way in which these whistled consonants and vowels contribute to word recognition. Musical experience shows a significant and increasing advantage according to the musical level achieved, which, when further specified according to vowels and consonants, shows stronger advantages for vowels over consonants for all participants with musical experience, and advantages for high-level musicians over nonmusicians for both consonants and vowels. By specifying high-level musician skill according to one's musical instrument expertise (piano, violin, flute, or singing), and comparing these instrument groups to expert users of whistled speech, we observe instrument-specific profiles in the answer patterns. The differentiation of such profiles underlines a resounding advantage for expert whistlers, as well as the role of instrument specificity when considering skills transferred from music to speech. These profiles also highlight differences in phoneme correspondence rates due to the context of the word, especially impacting “acute” consonants (/s/ and /t/), and highlighting the robustness of /i/ and /o/.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/135968
ISSN: 0364-0213
DOI: 10.1111/cogs.70032
Fuente: Cognitive Science [ISSN 0364-0213], v. 48 (12)
Colección:Artículos
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