Abstract
Differences in discriminability of stimuli near phoneme boundaries and findings from selective adaptation have been used to argue for the existence of neurophysiological mechanisms—feature detectors—which mediate the perception of speech and speechlike sounds. A detection theory model was used in order to discover whether or not the phoneme boundary effect and the shift in phoneme boundary after adaptation might rather be attributable to changes in response bias. This model was applied in the analysis of phoneme identifications of three sets of stimuli (/áp‐‐áb‐/, /b‐d/, /b‐p/) before and after adaptation. While the origins for the phoneme boundary effect appear to lie below the level of response bias, findings suggest that identification changes after adaptation may be due solely to shifts in criterion, rather than changes at the sensory level.