Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, University of Florida, 1225 Center Drive, Room 2150, Gainesville, FL, 32610, USA.
Department of Linguistics, University of Florida, 4131 Turlington Hall, P.O. Box 115454, Gainesville, FL, 32611, USA.
J Psycholinguist Res. 2023 Dec;52(6):2181-2210. doi: 10.1007/s10936-023-09998-5. Epub 2023 Jul 24.
Generalization in motor control is the extent to which motor learning affects movements in situations different than those in which it originally occurred. Recent data on orofacial speech movements indicates that motor sequence learning generalizes to novel syllable sequences containing phonotactically illegal, but previously practiced, consonant clusters. Practicing an entire syllable, however, results in even larger performance gains compared to practicing just its clusters. These patterns of generalization could reflect language-general changes in phonological memory storage and/or inter-articulator coordination during motor sequence learning. To disentangle these factors, we conducted two experiments in which talkers intensively practiced producing novel syllables containing illegal onset and coda clusters over two consecutive days. During the practice phases of both experiments, we observed that, through repetition, talkers gradually produced the syllables with fewer errors, indicative of learning. After learning, talkers were tested for generalization to single syllables (Experiment 1) or syllable pairs (Experiment 2) that overlapped to varying degrees with the practiced syllables. Across both experiments, we found that performance improvements from practicing syllables with illegal clusters partially generalized to novel syllables that contained those clusters, but performance was more error prone if the clusters occurred in a different syllable position (onset versus coda) as in practice, demonstrating that inter-articulator coordination is contextually sensitive. Furthermore, changing the position of a cluster was found to be more deleterious to motor performance during the production of the second syllables in syllable pairs, which required talkers to store more phonological material in memory prior to articulation, compared to single syllables. This interaction effect reveals a complex interplay between memory storage and inter-articulator coordination on generalization in speech motor sequence learning.
运动控制中的泛化是指运动学习在何种程度上影响与原始情况不同的情况下的运动。最近关于口腔言语运动的研究数据表明,运动序列学习可以泛化到包含语音上非法但以前练习过的辅音簇的新音节序列中。然而,与仅练习其簇相比,练习整个音节会导致更大的性能提升。这些泛化模式可能反映了在运动序列学习过程中语音记忆存储和/或关节间协调的语言普遍变化。为了理清这些因素,我们进行了两项实验,其中说话者在两天内集中练习产生包含非法起始和结尾辅音簇的新音节。在这两个实验的练习阶段,我们观察到,通过重复,说话者逐渐减少音节错误,表明学习正在进行。在学习之后,说话者接受了对与练习音节重叠程度不同的单个音节(实验 1)或音节对(实验 2)的泛化测试。在两个实验中,我们发现,练习包含非法簇的音节可以部分提高性能,从而部分泛化到包含这些簇的新音节,但如果簇出现在与练习不同的音节位置(起始或结尾),则性能更容易出错,这表明关节间协调具有上下文敏感性。此外,与练习相比,在音节对中产生第二个音节时,改变簇的位置对运动表现的影响更大,这需要说话者在发音前在记忆中存储更多的语音材料。这种交互作用揭示了在言语运动序列学习中的泛化中,记忆存储和关节间协调之间的复杂相互作用。