Abstract
Speech sounds are said to be perceivedcategorically. This notion is usually operationalized as the extent to which discrimination of stimuli is predictable from phoneme classification of the same stimuli. In this article, vowel continua were presented to listeners in a four-interval discrimination task (2IFC with flankers, or 4I2AFC) and a classification task. The results showed that there was no indication of categorical perception at all, since observed discrimination was found not to be predictable from the classification data. Variation in design, such as different step sizes or longer interstimulus intervals, did not affect this outcome, but a 2IFC experiment (without flankers, or 2I2AFC) involving the same stimuli elicited the traditional categorical results. These results indicate that the four-interval task made it difficult for listeners to use phonetic information and, hence, that categorical perception may be a function of the type of task used for discrimination.
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Note—This article was accepted by the previous editorial team, headed by Neil Macmillan.
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Gerrits, E., Schouten, M.E.H. Categorical perception depends on the discrimination task. Perception & Psychophysics 66, 363–376 (2004). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03194885
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03194885