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5 ses functional connectivity between acoustic-phonetic and graphomotor brain areas, but we find no evi
6 dynamic integration of both shared acoustic-phonetic and language-specific sequence- and word-level
10 ates the population-coded representations of phonetic and phonemic features in the auditory system.
12 er the potential of their account to embrace phonetic and phonological speech sound representations a
20 quires the successful interpretation of both phonetic and syllabic information in the auditory signal
23 redicted based on a combination of acoustic, phonetic, and visual features in highly disparate stimul
26 that encoded detailed information about the phonetic arrangement and composition of planned words du
28 change of phoneme at a native and nonnative phonetic boundary in full-term and preterm human infants
31 supramarginal gyrus: stimuli from different phonetic categories, when presented together in a contra
32 sounds into native vowel- and consonant-like phonetic categories-like and [l] in English-through a st
39 e-tip suppression on the neural responses to phonetic category change perception in definitively preb
40 , there were ERP discriminative responses to phonetic category changes across two phonetic contrasts
42 tributions, contextual theories propose that phonetic category learning is informed by higher-level p
43 ions respond preferentially to VOTs from one phonetic category, and are also sensitive to sub-phoneti
44 r hyperarticulation of vowels elicits larger phonetic change responses, as indexed by the mismatch ne
46 language processes characterized by regular phonetic changes, that is, gradual changes in vowel pron
51 ly, modifications that allow more human-like phonetic competition also led to more human-like tempora
52 ge regions for the semantic and phonological/phonetic computations preparing overt speech, thus suppo
59 a statistical structure based either on the phonetic content, while the voices varied randomly (Expe
61 ics surveyed include categorical perception, phonetic context effects, learning of speech and related
63 an subjects with paired speech sounds from a phonetic continuum but diverted their attention from pho
66 nses to phonetic category changes across two phonetic contrasts (bilabial-dental /ba/-/da/; dental-re
69 ts the conclusion that early experience with phonetic contrasts of a language results in changes in n
70 s a variety of acoustic cues to auditory and phonetic contrasts that are exploited by the listener in
71 bic production, achieving consonant-to-vowel phonetic contrasts via the simultaneous recruitment and
72 that only allow for the assessment of a few phonetic contrasts, we present a new method that allows
75 arise from disparities in access to acoustic-phonetic cues, particularly among those with hearing los
76 e roles of "association" and "simulation" in phonetic decoding, demonstrating that these two routes c
77 children with severe SNHL: phonemic skills, phonetic decoding, reading comprehension, and speed of i
81 ic motor circuits are recruited that reflect phonetic distinctive features of the speech sounds encou
84 The superior temporal gyrus (STG) encodes phonetic elements like consonants and vowels, but it is
85 provide evidence that visual speech modifies phonetic encoding at the auditory cortex.SIGNIFICANCE ST
87 easingly detailed and acoustically invariant phonetic encoding emerging over the first year of life,
90 tionary solution corresponding to a state of phonetic equilibrium, in which speakers of all ages shar
92 del comparisons based on these data revealed phonetic feature processing for attended, but not unatte
94 rthermore, we find evidence that categorical phonetic feature processing is enhanced by attention, bu
95 rd encoding models and found that indices of phonetic feature processing tracked reliably with intell
96 on specifically enhances isolated indices of phonetic feature processing, but that such attention eff
97 ariables predicted speech identification and phonetic feature reception at both positive and negative
98 of the input, which operate in both acoustic-phonetic feature-based and articulatory-gestural domains
99 evolves over time, jointly encoding both its phonetic features and the amount of time elapsed since o
100 uli in terms of their spectrograms and their phonetic features and then quantified the strength of th
101 upport the notion that, for attended speech, phonetic features are processed as a distinct stage, sep
102 o context and how well a word's acoustic and phonetic features are processed by the brain at the time
105 l cortex responded selectively to individual phonetic features defined on the basis of machine-extrac
106 t glimpsed speech is encoded at the level of phonetic features for target and non-target talkers, wit
107 ymes to investigate the cortical encoding of phonetic features in a longitudinal cohort of infants wh
108 cal neural populations are tuned to acoustic-phonetic features of all consonants and vowels and to dy
111 The encoding of both spectrotemporal and phonetic features was shown to be more robust in AV spee
112 f spoken language in humans are organized by phonetic features(1,2), such as articulatory parameters(
114 ows during breathing and speaking, including phonetic features, using orders-of-magnitude estimates,
121 n cortical oxy-haemoglobin during a Japanese phonetic fluency task can differentiate psychiatric pati
123 mplicated in the invariant representation of phonetic forms and that this area also responds preferen
128 lterations that change the vowel's perceived phonetic identity; moreover, the effect generalizes acro
129 e results add further evidence that acoustic-phonetic impairments, particularly impairments of voicin
130 ing the stimuli as synchronous, and the same phonetic incongruence that produced the illusion also le
131 apid and effortless extraction of meaningful phonetic information from a highly variable acoustic sig
133 ime, one subfield has examined perception of phonetic information independent of its contribution to
135 icture naming, conceptual, phonological, and phonetic information may be accessed rapidly and in para
136 l movies can uncover tuning for acoustic and phonetic information that generalizes to simpler stimuli
137 temporal sulcus responds to the presence of phonetic information, but its anterior part only respond
140 en-language task, online accrual of acoustic-phonetic input and competition between partially active
141 ysis of the relationship between audiovisual phonetic input in comparison with stored knowledge, as h
142 r this competition is restricted to acoustic-phonetic interference or if it extends to competition fo
145 Between 9 and 10 mo of age, infants show phonetic learning from live, but not prerecorded, exposu
148 ing on naturalistic speech can predict early phonetic learning, as observed in Japanese and American
149 hanism-driven approach to the study of early phonetic learning, together with a quantitative modeling
150 The neural signatures of learning at the phonetic level can be documented at a remarkably early p
151 direct evidence for acoustic-to-higher order phonetic level encoding of speech sounds in human langua
152 t missing speech is restored at the acoustic-phonetic level in bilateral auditory cortex, in real-tim
159 ce of higher level stimulus features such as phonetics on temporal processing is poorly understood.
160 events supporting semantic and phonological/phonetic operations, progressing from posterior occipito
161 Translations for cancer were classified as phonetic or borrowed (34 [32%]), unknown (30 [28%]), neu
165 e, 18% of the patients had impaired acoustic-phonetic perception overall, with 44% impaired on voicin
169 g of multiple linguistic features, including phonetic, prelexical phonotactics, word frequency, and l
171 gyrus (STG), associated with shared acoustic-phonetic processing of foundational speech sound feature
172 cortex that allow for more robust automatic, phonetic processing of native-language speech input.
173 It has been suggested by Poeppel (2003) that phonetic processing requires an optimal time scale of 25
176 ld has been less concerned with the acoustic-phonetic properties of speech and more concerned with ho
177 he non-arbitrary mappings that exist between phonetic properties of speech sounds and their meaning.
178 life, infants acquire information about the phonetic properties of their native language simply by l
181 the split fovea assumption, the semantic and phonetic radicals are initially projected to and process
186 ecific phonemic classes, the overall size of phonetic repertoire, its typicality and similarity to th
187 etic encoding by dynamically weighting which phonetic representation in the auditory cortex is streng
189 rocessing using the speech spectrogram and a phonetic representation, and test how AV integration ada
190 illusion, we show that visual context primes phonetic representations at the auditory cortex, alterin
192 uctured organization and encoding cascade of phonetic representations by prefrontal neurons in humans
195 obe neural selectivity, we observed acoustic-phonetic selectivity in left anterior and left posterior
199 mporal sulcus being to transiently represent phonetic sequences, whether heard or internally generate
200 at this area also responds preferentially to phonetic sounds, above artificial control sounds or envi
201 e relation between oral-motor inhibition and phonetic speech discrimination suggest a surprisingly ea
204 nt from infants' earliest brain responses to phonetic stimuli is reflected in their language and prer
207 btypes, with corticostriatal patterns in the phonetic subtype and brainstem and thalamic patterns in
208 e-at-onset, predicted specific 4R-tauopathy; phonetic subtype and younger age predicted corticobasal
209 but rather there are distinct subtypes: the phonetic subtype is characterized by distorted sound sub
211 tem while supralaryngeal articulation at the phonetic/syllabic level is coordinated by a more ventral
213 ference may have existed before the onset of phonetic training, and that its presence confers an adva
215 x than nonexpert controls, and the amount of phonetic transcription training did not predict auditory
216 e size of left pars opercularis and years of phonetic transcription training experience, illustrating
219 capable of discerning differences among the phonetic units of all languages, including native- and f
221 There is evidence that early mastery of the phonetic units of language requires learning in a social
223 etic category, and are also sensitive to sub-phonetic VOT differences within a population's preferred
224 n in response adaptation to sound pairs with phonetic vs. spatial sound changes, demonstrating that t
225 sive hierarchy of language features spanning phonetic, word form, lexical-syntactic, syntactic, and s