Deck 4: Perception of Language
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Deck 4: Perception of Language
1
Researchers studying __________ are most likely to make use of a speech spectrogram.
A) sociolinguistics
B) acoustic phonetics
C) articulatory phonetics
D) phonology
A) sociolinguistics
B) acoustic phonetics
C) articulatory phonetics
D) phonology
articulatory phonetics
2
The speech sounds [t], [d], and [s] are instances of:
A) voiced consonants
B) alveolar consonants
C) fricative consonants
D) stop consonants
A) voiced consonants
B) alveolar consonants
C) fricative consonants
D) stop consonants
alveolar consonants
3
________ are produced by impeding the airflow at some location in the vocal tract.
A) Vowels
B) Semi-vowels
C) Consonants
D) Formants
A) Vowels
B) Semi-vowels
C) Consonants
D) Formants
Consonants
4
________ refers to the fact that acoustic properties of different phonemes overlap in time in the speech signal.
A) Coarticulation
B) Context-conditioned variation
C) Rate of speech
D) Parallel transmission
A) Coarticulation
B) Context-conditioned variation
C) Rate of speech
D) Parallel transmission
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5
A general term that refers to the aspects of an utterance's sound that are not specific to the words themselves (for example, intonation and rate) is:
A) prosody
B) intonation
C) stress
D) rate
A) prosody
B) intonation
C) stress
D) rate
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6
The delay in the release of vocal cord vibration between the release of a consonant and the start of a vowel is called:
A) frication
B) voice onset time
C) a formant transition
D) a glide
A) frication
B) voice onset time
C) a formant transition
D) a glide
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7
The acoustic information that specifies a phoneme will change based on preceding or following phonemes. This is known as:
A) parallel transmission
B) coarticulation
C) formant interaction
D) context-conditioned variation
A) parallel transmission
B) coarticulation
C) formant interaction
D) context-conditioned variation
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8
The use of pitch to signify different meanings is:
A) stress
B) rate
C) intonation
D) prosody
A) stress
B) rate
C) intonation
D) prosody
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9
In English, there is a rising intonation in:
A) wh-questions
B) yes/no questions
C) both wh- and yes/no question
D) neither wh- nor yes/no questions
A) wh-questions
B) yes/no questions
C) both wh- and yes/no question
D) neither wh- nor yes/no questions
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10
The consonants /b/, /d/, and /g/ differ in their ________
A) manner of articulation
B) place of articulation
C) frication
D) voicing
A) manner of articulation
B) place of articulation
C) frication
D) voicing
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11
The speech sounds [p], [b], and [k] are instances of:
A) velar consonants
B) stop consonants
C) voiced consonants
D) alveolar consonants
A) velar consonants
B) stop consonants
C) voiced consonants
D) alveolar consonants
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12
Consonants that are articulated at the lips are called _____ consonants.
A) alveolar
B) stop
C) bilabial
D) fricative
A) alveolar
B) stop
C) bilabial
D) fricative
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13
In a study on categorical perception, listeners hear two sounds and then a third, and determine if the third sound was the same as the first or the second. Results show that:
A) performance is at chance if the two sounds are from the same phonetic category
B) performance is poor at the outset but listeners improve significantly with practice
C) performance is better if the two sounds are from the same phonetic category than if they are from different phonetic categories
D) all of the above
A) performance is at chance if the two sounds are from the same phonetic category
B) performance is poor at the outset but listeners improve significantly with practice
C) performance is better if the two sounds are from the same phonetic category than if they are from different phonetic categories
D) all of the above
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14
The lack of invariance refers to the fact that there is no one-to-one correspondence between:
A) formant transitions and steady states
B) acoustic cues and perceptual experience
C) articulatory processes and acoustic cues
D) speech signals and neurological processes
A) formant transitions and steady states
B) acoustic cues and perceptual experience
C) articulatory processes and acoustic cues
D) speech signals and neurological processes
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15
The production of vowels is characterized by:
A) whether they are voiced or unvoiced
B) the location of constriction in the vocal tract
C) the position and height of the tongue
D) the degree of frication
A) whether they are voiced or unvoiced
B) the location of constriction in the vocal tract
C) the position and height of the tongue
D) the degree of frication
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16
The words blue and blew are:
A) allophones
B) homophones
C) logographs
D) suprasegmentals
A) allophones
B) homophones
C) logographs
D) suprasegmentals
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17
A formant is:
A) a location in the vocal tract
B) a rapid movement of the eye
C) a band of energy in a spectrogram
D) a stroke of a Chinese character
A) a location in the vocal tract
B) a rapid movement of the eye
C) a band of energy in a spectrogram
D) a stroke of a Chinese character
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18
The study of speech sounds that references the movements within the vocal tract is:
A) acoustic phonetics
B) speech perception
C) categorical perception
D) articulatory phonetics
A) acoustic phonetics
B) speech perception
C) categorical perception
D) articulatory phonetics
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19
For speech processing to be modular it must:
A) be slow
B) share properties with general auditory processing
C) be affected by feedback
D) be domain specific
A) be slow
B) share properties with general auditory processing
C) be affected by feedback
D) be domain specific
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20
The phenomenon of producing more than one speech sound at a time is called:
A) coarticulation
B) context-conditioned variation
C) parallel transmission
D) formant interaction
A) coarticulation
B) context-conditioned variation
C) parallel transmission
D) formant interaction
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21
The fact that we can perceive letters in a word context better than individual letters is referred to as:
A) the interactive activation effect
B) the word-superiority effect
C) the phonemic restoration effect
D) mispronunciation detection
A) the interactive activation effect
B) the word-superiority effect
C) the phonemic restoration effect
D) mispronunciation detection
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22
The dual-route model explains how we can:
A) pronounce words we've never seen before
B) identify real words faster than non-words
C) identify isolated words that have been excised from fluent speech
D) choose among multiple meanings of ambiguous words
A) pronounce words we've never seen before
B) identify real words faster than non-words
C) identify isolated words that have been excised from fluent speech
D) choose among multiple meanings of ambiguous words
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23
The connectionist model showing that various levels of speech processing occur simultaneously and interactively is known as: (the):
A) motor theory
B) TRACE model
C) modularity
D) dual-route model
A) motor theory
B) TRACE model
C) modularity
D) dual-route model
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24
Studies by Warren and colleagues indicate that if a speech sound in a sentence is replaced by a cough, listeners still perceive the sound. This is called:
A) categorical perception
B) phonemic restoration
C) shadowing effect
D) rate normalization
A) categorical perception
B) phonemic restoration
C) shadowing effect
D) rate normalization
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25
VOT is a(n) __________ and ___________ cue to voicing in stop consonants.
A) unreliable; variable
B) unreliable; invariant
C) reliable; variable
D) reliable; invariant
A) unreliable; variable
B) unreliable; invariant
C) reliable; variable
D) reliable; invariant
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26
Studies of mispronunciation detection have found that restorations are:
A) more fluent than exact repetitions
B) more common than exact repetition
C) less common than exact repetitions
D) less fluent than exact repetitions
A) more fluent than exact repetitions
B) more common than exact repetition
C) less common than exact repetitions
D) less fluent than exact repetitions
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27
Pollack and Pickett (1964) showed that when a word is isolated from its context it becomes:
A) completely unintelligible
B) more intelligible than in context
C) less intelligible than in context
D) just as intelligible as in context
A) completely unintelligible
B) more intelligible than in context
C) less intelligible than in context
D) just as intelligible as in context
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28
The movements of the eyes during reading are called:
A) fixations
B) fegressions
C) saccades
D) radicals
A) fixations
B) fegressions
C) saccades
D) radicals
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29
Studies of categorical perception have found that:
A) it occurs for both consonants and vowels
B) it only occurs with intact speech syllables
C) it is found with chirps and bleats, but not backward syllables
D) it only occurs with consonants
A) it occurs for both consonants and vowels
B) it only occurs with intact speech syllables
C) it is found with chirps and bleats, but not backward syllables
D) it only occurs with consonants
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30
McGurk and MacDonald (1976) found that when a speaker's lips produce the syllable /ga/ while an audio tape of the sound /ba/ is played, listeners hear the fused sound as:
A) /ga/
B) /ba/
C) /da/
D) a nonspeech chirp
A) /ga/
B) /ba/
C) /da/
D) a nonspeech chirp
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31
Phonemic restoration and mispronunciation studies reveal the effects of __________ information in speech processing.
A) bottom-up
B) top-down
C) invariant
D) prosodic
A) bottom-up
B) top-down
C) invariant
D) prosodic
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32
Readers pick up visual information:
A) during a saccade
B) during a fixation
C) during a regression
D) during a trace
A) during a saccade
B) during a fixation
C) during a regression
D) during a trace
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33
The motor theory of speech perception:
A) contends that we perceive speech by reference to production
B) states that perception and production operate independently
C) is inconsistent with the notion of a phonetic module
D) focuses on speech dysfluency
A) contends that we perceive speech by reference to production
B) states that perception and production operate independently
C) is inconsistent with the notion of a phonetic module
D) focuses on speech dysfluency
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34
Neisser 's (1964) study of visual search, in which subjects search a list of letters for a target letter, provided evidence for the role of _____ in the perception of written language.
A) fixations
B) saccades
C) regressions
D) features
A) fixations
B) saccades
C) regressions
D) features
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35
___________ maps sounds of language onto written symbols or characters
A) Logography
B) Orthography
C) Syllabary
D) Radicals
A) Logography
B) Orthography
C) Syllabary
D) Radicals
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36
We use _____ to distinguish between the two meanings of blackbird.
A) Intonation
B) stress
C) both (a) and (b)
D) neither (a) nor (b)
A) Intonation
B) stress
C) both (a) and (b)
D) neither (a) nor (b)
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