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1
The processing of intimately familiar and unfamiliar voices: Specific neural responses of speaker recognition and identification
In: PLoS One (2021)
Abstract: Research has repeatedly shown that familiar and unfamiliar voices elicit different neural responses. But it has also been suggested that different neural correlates associate with the feeling of having heard a voice and knowing who the voice represents. The terminology used to designate these varying responses remains vague, creating a degree of confusion in the literature. Additionally, terms serving to designate tasks of voice discrimination, voice recognition, and speaker identification are often inconsistent creating further ambiguities. The present study used event-related potentials (ERPs) to clarify the difference between responses to 1) unknown voices, 2) trained-to-familiar voices as speech stimuli are repeatedly presented, and 3) intimately familiar voices. In an experiment, 13 participants listened to repeated utterances recorded from 12 speakers. Only one of the 12 voices was intimately familiar to a participant, whereas the remaining 11 voices were unfamiliar. The frequency of presentation of these 11 unfamiliar voices varied with only one being frequently presented (the trained-to-familiar voice). ERP analyses revealed different responses for intimately familiar and unfamiliar voices in two distinct time windows (P2 between 200–250 ms and a late positive component, LPC, between 450–850 ms post-onset) with late responses occurring only for intimately familiar voices. The LPC present sustained shifts, and short-time ERP components appear to reflect an early recognition stage. The trained voice equally elicited distinct responses, compared to rarely heard voices, but these occurred in a third time window (N250 between 300–350 ms post-onset). Overall, the timing of responses suggests that the processing of intimately familiar voices operates in two distinct steps of voice recognition, marked by a P2 on right centro-frontal sites, and speaker identification marked by an LPC component. The recognition of frequently heard voices entails an independent recognition process marked by a differential N250. Based on the present results and previous observations, it is proposed that there is a need to distinguish between processes of voice “recognition” and “identification”. The present study also specifies test conditions serving to reveal this distinction in neural responses, one of which bears on the length of speech stimuli given the late responses associated with voice identification.
Keyword: Research Article
URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33861789
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250214
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8051806/
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2
The Structural Effects of Modality on the Rise of Symbolic Language: A Rebuttal of Evolutionary Accounts and a Laboratory Demonstration
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3
Physiological attributes of vocal fatigue and their acoustic effects: a synthesis of findings for a criterion-based prevention of acquired voice disorders
In: Journal of voice. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier 24 (2010) 3, 324-336
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4
Acoustic correlates of fatigue in laryngeal muscles: findings for a criterion-based prevention of acquired voice pathologies
In: Journal of speech, language, and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 51 (2008) 5, 1161-1170
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5
Intrinsic factors of cyclical motion in speech articulators: reappraising postulates of serial-ordering in motor-control theories
In: Journal of phonetics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 36 (2008) 2, 295-307
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6
On the function of stress rhythms in speech: evidence of a link with grouping effects on serial memory
In: Language and speech. - London [u.a.] : Sage Publ. 49 (2006) 4, 495-519
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7
Timing relations in speech and the identification of voice-onset times : a stable perceptual boundary for voicing categories across speaking rates
In: Perception & psychophysics. - Austin, Tex. : Psychonomic Journals 64 (2002) 1, 121-130
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8
A stumbling block in the development of motor theories of speech: relating EMG to force-related changes in articulation
In: Clinical linguistics & phonetics. - London : Informa Healthcare 15 (2001) 1, 123-128
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9
A stumbling block in the development of motor theories of speech : relating EMG to force-related changes in articulation
In: Clinical linguistics & phonetics. - London : Informa Healthcare 15 (2001) 1-2, 123-127
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10
Alphabet-rellated biases in psycholinguistic enquiries : considerations for direct theories of speech production and perception
In: Journal of phonetics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 22 (1994) 1, 1-18
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11
A parameter of syllabification for 'VstopV' and relative-timing invariance
In: Journal of phonetics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 16 (1988) 3, 299-326
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