Reilly Kevin J, Pettibone Chelsea
Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Knoxville, Tennessee; and
Spaulding Youth Center, Northfield, New Hampshire.
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Nov 1;118(5):2925-2934. doi: 10.1152/jn.00702.2016. Epub 2017 Aug 23.
Repeated perturbations of auditory feedback during vowel production elicit changes not only in the production of the perturbed vowel (adaptation) but also in the production of nearby vowels that were not perturbed (generalization). The finding that adaptation generalizes to other, nonperturbed vowels suggests that sensorimotor representations for vowels are not independent; instead, the goals for producing any one vowel may depend in part on the goals for other vowels. The present study investigated the dependence or independence of vowel representations by evaluating adaptation and generalization in two groups of speakers exposed to auditory perturbations of their first formant (F1) during different vowels. The speakers in both groups who adapted to the perturbation exhibited generalization in two nonperturbed vowels that were produced under masking noise. Correlation testing was performed to evaluate the relations between adaptation and generalization as well as between the generalization in the two nonperturbed vowels. These tests identified significant coupling between the F1 changes of adjacent vowels but not nonadjacent vowels. The pattern of correlation findings indicates that generalization was due in part to feedforward representations that are partly shared across adjacent vowels, possibly to maintain their acoustic contrast. Speech adaptations to alterations, or perturbations, of auditory feedback have provided important insights into sensorimotor representations underlying speech. One finding from these studies that is yet to be accounted for is vowel generalization, which describes the effects of repeated perturbations to one vowel on the production of other vowels that were not perturbed. The present study used correlation testing to quantify the effects of changes in a perturbed vowel on neighboring (i.e., similar) nonperturbed vowels. The results identified significant correlations between the changes of adjacent, but not nonadjacent, vowel pairs. This finding suggests that generalization is partly a response to adaptation and not solely due to the auditory perturbation.
在元音发音过程中反复扰动听觉反馈,不仅会引起被扰动元音发音的变化(适应),还会引起未被扰动的相邻元音发音的变化(泛化)。适应能够泛化到其他未被扰动的元音,这一发现表明元音的感觉运动表征并非相互独立;相反,发出任何一个元音的目标可能部分取决于其他元音的目标。本研究通过评估两组在不同元音发音时受到第一共振峰(F1)听觉扰动的说话者的适应和泛化情况,来探究元音表征的依赖性或独立性。两组中适应了扰动的说话者在掩蔽噪声下发出的两个未被扰动的元音中均表现出泛化现象。进行了相关性测试,以评估适应与泛化之间以及两个未被扰动元音的泛化之间的关系。这些测试确定了相邻元音而非非相邻元音的F1变化之间存在显著的耦合。相关性研究结果的模式表明,泛化部分是由于前馈表征,这些表征在相邻元音之间部分共享,可能是为了维持它们的声学对比度。对听觉反馈的改变或扰动的言语适应,为言语背后的感觉运动表征提供了重要的见解。这些研究中尚未得到解释的一个发现是元音泛化,它描述了对一个元音的反复扰动对其他未被扰动元音发音的影响。本研究使用相关性测试来量化被扰动元音的变化对相邻(即相似)未被扰动元音的影响。结果确定了相邻元音对而非非相邻元音对的变化之间存在显著的相关性。这一发现表明,泛化部分是对适应的反应,而不仅仅是由于听觉扰动。