Previous research involving synthetic speech reveals that both the second‐ and the third‐formant transitions play a role in the perception of the voiced stops, |b|, |d|, and |g|. The present experiment examined an additional cue (burst frequency), repeated a portion of the previous research, and collected more information about how the cues act in various combinations. Synthetic speech sounds containing one cue, all possible combinations of two cues, and all possible combinations of three cues were tested on a large group of listeners. Burst frequency was found to act as a cue for the perception of the voiced stops in much the same manner as this variable affects the perception of the unvoiced stops. To the extent that the present experiment overlapped previous research, the two sets of findings were in very close agreement. When cues were combined, they shared in the control of perception in such a way that the contribution of any one cue was largely independent of the nature and the number of the other cues present in the sound. The individual cues seemed to have directional properties somewhat like vectors. The addition of cues produced effects somewhat like the addition of vectors.