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Statistical Learning of Prosodic Patterns and Reversal of Perceptual Cues forSentence Prominence
Abstract
Recent work has proposed that prominence perception inspeech could be driven by predictability of prosodic patterns,connecting prominence perception to the concept of statisticallearning. In the present study, we tested the predictabilityhypothesis by conducting a listening test where subjects werefirst exposed to a 5-minute stream of sentences with a certainproportion of sentence-final words having either a falling orrising pitch trajectory. After the exposure stage, subjects wereasked to grade prominence in a set of novel sentences withsimilar pitch patterns. The results show that the subjects weresignificantly more likely to perceive words with low-probability pitch trajectories as prominent independently ofthe direction of the pitch change. This suggests that evenshort exposure to prosodic patterns with a certain statisticalstructure can induce changes in prominence perception,supporting the connection between prominence perceptionand attentional orientation towards low-probability events inan otherwise predictable context.
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