Title: | Cognitive and probabilistic basis of prominence perception in speech |
Author(s): | Kakouros, Sofoklis |
Date: | 2017 |
Language: | en |
Pages: | 91 + app. 142 |
Department: | Signaalinkäsittelyn ja akustiikan laitos Department of Signal Processing and Acoustics |
ISBN: | 978-952-60-7423-8 (electronic) 978-952-60-7424-5 (printed) |
Series: | Aalto University publication series DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS, 88/2017 |
ISSN: | 1799-4942 (electronic) 1799-4934 (printed) 1799-4934 (ISSN-L) |
Supervising professor(s): | Laine, Unto K., Prof. Emer., Aalto University, Department of Signal Processing and Acoustics, Finland; Alku, Paavo, Acad. Prof., Aalto University, Department of Signal Processing and Acoustics, Finland |
Thesis advisor(s): | Räsänen, Okko, Dr., Aalto University, Department of Signal Processing and Acoustics, Finland |
Subject: | Acoustics, Psychology, Linguistics |
Keywords: | prosody, prominence, attention, speech perception, statistical learning, stimulus predictability, speech analysis, cognitive modeling |
Controlled terms: | tekniikka, oppiminen, viestintä |
Archive | yes |
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Abstract:The research in this thesis examines the topic of the cognitive and probabilistic nature of prominence perception in speech. In recent years, there has been an accumulating number of studies from linguistics, phonetics, and neuroscience providing evidence that (i) prominence is related to attention- and expectation-based factors, (ii) frequency and predictability effects hold an important role in language processing, accounting for several linguistic phenomena, and (iii) the human brain represents information in a probabilistic way, with humans behaving as optimal probabilistic observers. On the basis of this evidence, the relationship between prominence, attention, and predictability is explored. A hypothesis is proposed suggesting that prominence perception in speech is connected with the unpredictability of prosodic features that draw the listeners' attention to the surprising aspects of the input.
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Parts:[Publication 1]: Sofoklis Kakouros, Okko Räsänen, and Unto K. Laine. Attention Based Temporal Filtering of Sensory Signals for Data Redundancy Reduction. In IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP-2013), pp. 3188–3192, Vancouver, Canada, May 2013. DOI: 10.1109/ICASSP.2013.6638246 View at Publisher [Publication 2]: Sofoklis Kakouros and Okko Räsänen. Perception of Sentence Stress in English Infant Directed Speech. In 15th Annual Conference of the International Speech Communication Association (Interspeech-2014), pp. 1821–1825, Singapore, September 2014.[Publication 3]: Sofoklis Kakouros and Okko Räsänen. Perception of Sentence Stress in Speech Correlates with the Temporal Unpredictability of Prosodic Features. Cognitive Science, 40(7), 1739–1774, September 2016. DOI: 10.1111/cogs.12306 View at Publisher [Publication 4]: Sofoklis Kakouros and Okko Räsänen. Analyzing the Predictability of Lexeme-specific Prosodic Features as a Cue to Sentence Prominence. In 37th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci-2015), pp. 1039–1044, Pasadena, California, July 2015.[Publication 5]: Sofoklis Kakouros, Joris Pelemans, Lyan Verwimp, Patrick Wambacq, and Okko Räsänen. Analyzing the Contribution of Top-down Lexical and Bottom-up Acoustic Cues in the Detection of Sentence Prominence. In 17th Annual Conference of the International Speech Communication Association (Interspeech-2016), pp. 1074–1078, San Francisco, California, September 2016. DOI: 10.21437/Interspeech.2016-926 View at Publisher [Publication 6]: Sofoklis Kakouros and Okko Räsänen. 3PRO – An Unsupervised Method for the Automatic Detection of Sentence Prominence in Speech. Speech Communication, 82, 67–84, September 2016. DOI: 10.1016/j.specom.2016.06.004 View at Publisher [Publication 7]: Sofoklis Kakouros, Nelli Salminen, and Okko Räsänen. Making Predictable Unpredictable with Style – Behavioral and Electrophysiological Evidence for the Critical Role of Prosodic Expectations in the Perception of Prominence in Speech. Submitted to Neuropsychologia. |
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