Abstract
In the experiments reported here, perceived speaker identity was controlled by manipulating the fundamental frequency (F0) range of carrier phrases in which speech tokens were embedded. In the first experiment, words from two "hood"-"hud" continua were synthesized with different F0. The words were then embedded in synthetic carrier phrases with intonation contours which reduced perceived speaker identity differences for test items with different F0. The results indicated that when perceived speaker identity differences were reduced, the effect of F0 on vowel identification was also reduced. Experiment 2 indicated that when items presented in carrier phrases are matched for speaker identity and F0 with items in isolation, there is no effect for presentation in a carrier phrase. Experiment 3 involved the presentation of vowels from the "hood"-"hud" continuum in two different intonational contexts which were judged to have been produced by different speakers, even though the F0 of the test word was identical in the two contexts. There was a shift in identification as a result of the intonational context which was interpreted as evidence for the role of perceived identity in vowel normalization. Overall, the experiments suggest that perceived speaker identity is a better predictor of vowel normalization effects than is intrinsic F0. This indicates that the role of F0 in vowel normalization is mediated through perceived speaker identity.

This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit: